Looking for bathroom remodeling in St. Petersburg? LRG Contractors Group is a licensed Florida general contractor serving St. Petersburg and the surrounding Pinellas County — from Historic Old Northeast, Kenwood, Downtown / Central Avenue and beyond. Watertight, beautifully finished bathroom remodels — primary suites to powder rooms.
Bathrooms are small rooms with big stakes: they fail expensively when done wrong. Hidden water damage, improper waterproofing, and undersized ventilation are the most common — and most costly — defects we're called to fix from other people's work, and Florida's humidity makes them worse faster.
For St. Petersburg specifically, it comes down to local realities: St. Pete's split between protected 1920s historic bungalows and low-lying waterfront blocks means the right remodel in Old Northeast is the wrong one in Shore Acres — we scope to the home's era and its flood exposure, not a template. St. Petersburg runs its own building department under the Florida Building Code; bungalow districts add historic-character considerations, and waterfront blocks like Shore Acres sit in FEMA flood zones where substantial-improvement and elevation rules can apply. We design to those rules from day one. We design and permit your bathroom remodeling around exactly those conditions.
Bathroom Remodeling in St. Petersburg — what we handle
- Primary / en-suite spa bathrooms
- Walk-in and curbless showers (aging-in-place ready)
- Freestanding tubs and wet rooms
- Humidity-aware waterproofing and proper ventilation
- Custom tile, vanities, and stone
- Heated towel rails, modern lighting, and exhaust upgrades
- Plumbing and electrical upgrades
- Permits and inspections
Bathroom Remodeling cost
Typical Tampa Bay ranges, not a quote. Tile selection, layout changes, and what's found behind the walls move the number most. You get a fixed proposal after a site visit.
Timeline
Most bathroom remodels run 3–6 weeks of construction, plus design and permitting time.
St. Petersburg permits
St. Petersburg runs its own building department under the Florida Building Code; bungalow districts add historic-character considerations, and waterfront blocks like Shore Acres sit in FEMA flood zones where substantial-improvement and elevation rules can apply. We design to those rules from day one.
