You picked this zip code on purpose. The kitchen came with the house.
Gainesville is a considered choice. You looked at the schools, the commute time, the neighborhoods, and the square footage you could get for the money, and you made a deliberate decision to be here. Then you moved in with a kitchen the builder finished in a hurry and a master bath that came standard with about three thousand identical houses in Prince William County.
The gap between what you bought and what you actually wanted has probably been on the list since the first week. It stayed there because finding someone to close it, someone who shows up, prices it honestly, and doesn’t go quiet three weeks in, turned out to be harder than it should be.
Kyland Cole Construction Group works with Gainesville homeowners who are done waiting for the right contractor to materialize and ready to just get it done.
The homeowners we work with in Gainesville are not home during the day. They’re on I-66 by 7am and back after 6. They can’t answer contractor calls mid-meeting or swing by the house at noon to check on things. What they need is someone who runs the project without requiring them to be present to make it run.
That’s what we built Kyland Cole around. Not the craftsmanship speech, not the years-in-business number. The part where you leave for work in the morning and come home to a project that moved forward without you having to push it.
From Piedmont families who have been tolerating the builder’s cabinet package since closing day to Oak Valley homeowners ready to finally take on the primary bath they’ve been planning for two years, the common thread is always the same. Get it done right without it becoming another thing on the list.
A lot of remodeling companies in Northern Virginia operate the same way. You meet someone impressive at the consultation. Then a different person coordinates the schedule. Then a crew shows up that nobody introduced. By week two you’re not sure who to call when you have a question and you’re not sure anyone would answer anyway.
Kyland Cole Construction runs differently because it’s small on purpose. Josh and Quentin Hastings are the company. Not figureheads, not names on a logo. Quentin is in Prince William County, on job sites, running the Northern Virginia work himself. Josh handles the business side with a background built over years running operations for large home services companies, which is a long way of saying he’s spent a long time fixing the problems other contractors didn’t see coming.
When you have a question two weeks into your project, you have someone’s actual number and they pick up.
We don’t hand you a package and ask you to pick the one that fits least badly. We look at the actual home, the actual layout, and figure out what it actually needs.
Our remodeling services in Gainesville include:
Most of the homes in Gainesville were built to a price point and finished to match. Late 1990s through mid-2010s construction, solid floor plans, and whatever the builder’s standard package included that year. The bones are solid. The countertops are not, right?
In neighborhoods like Piedmont and Virginia Crossing, you’ll find colonial-style single-family homes with good layouts and kitchens that were functional on day one but started feeling dated somewhere around year five. The opportunity isn’t structural. It’s finish work, upgraded surfaces, and the kind of detail that makes a room feel chosen rather than defaulted to.
Townhomes in Wentworth Green and Crossroads Village are working with tighter square footage, which means every material choice matters more. Getting the most out of a smaller footprint requires someone who thinks through the layout before picking up a tile saw, not after. Oak Valley is a different conversation entirely. Larger lots, higher price points, homeowners with specific ideas about what they want and a reasonable expectation that those ideas will show up in the result.
One thing every Gainesville home shares: Prince William County humidity and temperature swings that will expose a material choice that looked fine on a sample board. We know what holds up here and what looks good on paper until the second summer.
Most remodeling projects don’t go sideways because of bad craftsmanship. They go sideways because nobody was actually running them. The scope was loose. The schedule was aspirational. Updates required chasing. By the time something went wrong it had already been wrong for a week and nobody said anything.
We run projects like people with somewhere to be. Written scope before anything starts, not because we love paperwork, but because a verbal plan means something different to everyone who heard it. Timeline agreed on before demo day and treated as a commitment rather than an optimistic estimate. When something unexpected turns up inside a wall, you hear about it that day, not when it shows up on the invoice.
For Gainesville families running full schedules, the point isn’t only that the work is good. It’s that the process doesn’t require you to babysit it.
When you work with Kyland Cole Construction Group in Gainesville, you can expect:
The difference between a project that goes well and one that becomes a cautionary tale at your neighbor’s dinner table usually isn’t craftsmanship. It’s whether the contractor was actually running the job or just reacting to it.
Gainesville homeowners are busy. They don’t have time to follow up three times to confirm someone’s coming Tuesday. They don’t want to find out mid-invoice that the price changed. They don’t want to explain to their HOA why there’s been a crew parked outside for six weeks on what was supposed to be a three-week kitchen.
Quentin has been building in Northern Virginia since 2007. He knows how Prince William County homes are built, where they tend to fail, and what it takes to fix them right the first time. Josh spent years in home services operations seeing every version of how projects go wrong and building a company specifically designed to sidestep each one.
What that looks like in practice:
Finding a contractor is easy. Finding one who actually follows through is the problem Gainesville homeowners keep running into. So instead of telling you what we do well, here’s what you won’t experience when you hire us.
You won’t spend a week wondering if we’re still coming. You won’t get a call on Tuesday saying Thursday doesn’t work anymore and we’ll be in touch. You won’t watch the timeline drift by two weeks with no explanation. You won’t open a final invoice and find line items nobody discussed. You won’t call and leave a message that sits there for three days. You won’t come home on Friday to a job site that looks exactly the same as it did Monday.
In an HOA community, your neighbors are going to notice how the project runs. And then they’re going to notice the result. We’d rather both of those things reflect well on you.
Clients come back to us because:
Three Things That Happen Before We Touch Anything
Most remodeling horror stories start the same way. Something was assumed instead of written down. A price was agreed to verbally and remembered differently by both parties. Work started before the scope was settled because everyone was eager to get going.
We don’t do any of that.
First. We walk the space with you. Not to pitch. To listen. You tell us what’s been driving you up the wall, what you’ve been working around, and what you’ve been meaning to fix since the week you moved in. We ask questions and we don’t rush the conversation.
Second. We put the scope in writing. Every line item. Every material. Every number. You see exactly what you’re agreeing to before anyone picks up a tool. No estimates that turn into something else once the job is open.
Third. We give you a timeline that means something. Not an optimistic range designed to win the job. An actual schedule we’re committing to, with enough built-in honesty that when something unexpected turns up inside a wall, it doesn’t blow the whole calendar.
After that, we build. You go to work. We check in every morning so you always know what’s happening without having to ask.
One call, one walkthrough, one written estimate you can actually make a real decision from. No pressure, no deposit to get a number, no vague range that balloons later. Just a straight answer about what it involves and what it costs. That’s where most good projects start.
Now you know about us, let us know a little about you and your project below! ⬇️
Jennifer and Paul
Piedmont, Gainesville, VA
We have two kids, both working, long commutes. The last thing we needed was to spend our evenings chasing a contractor down. We didn’t have to. Quentin sent us an update every morning before we left for work. The kitchen is done and it looks nothing like the rest of the houses on our street, in the best way.
Walter T.
Heritage Hunt, Gainesville, VA
I’m retired so I was home every day of the project. I’ve had a lot of contractors through this house over the years and I have opinions. These guys cleaned up after themselves every single day without being asked. That alone put them ahead of most. The flooring looks excellent too but I think about the cleanup more than I should.
Chris D.
Wentworth Green, Gainesville, VA
Townhome with a small footprint. I was worried someone would replicate the same approach they use in a bigger house and it would feel off. Quentin looked at the space for about ten minutes before he said anything and then came back with ideas that made sense for how tight it was. The place looks twice as big as it did before.
Sandra and Kevin
Virginia Crossing, Gainesville, VA
We got four quotes. Three had basically the same number and one came in thirty percent lower. We almost went with the low one. Our neighbor talked us out of it because she’d seen that story end badly on her own street. We hired Kyland Cole Construction instead. The basement has been done six months. Not a single issue!
You’ve already done the hard work. You found someone worth calling. The rest is just a conversation.
Reach out and we’ll come walk the space, ask the right questions, and put together a written scope before you commit to anything. No pressure close, no deposit required to get an estimate. Just a clear picture of what the project involves and what it costs, so you can make a real decision.
The commute is long enough. Your home should be the part of the day that feels worth coming back to.