Below: verified Custom Home Builders & Remodelers providers serving Sanlando Springs, followed by guidance specific to this neighborhood.

Vetted Custom Home Builders & Luxury Remodelers Serving Sanlando Springs

Konkol Custom Homes & Remodeling

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #CGC1518155 40 yrs in business
(407) 539-2938

815 Orienta Avenue, Suite 1050, Altamonte Springs, FL 32701

Altamonte Springs custom home builder and luxury remodeler (CGC1518155) with 40+ years of experience. Specializes in custom builds, whole-home renovations, and additions throughout Seminole County.

  • Custom home building
  • Luxury remodeling
  • Home additions
  • Kitchen renovation
  • Bathroom remodeling

Laureano Construction Corporation

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #CBC1255658
(407) 837-3041

487 Birchwood Lane, Deltona, FL 32738

Florida-licensed building contractor (CBC1255658) serving Central Florida with custom home construction, structural additions, whole-home renovations, kitchen and bathroom remodels, and outdoor living environments.

  • Custom homes
  • Structural additions
  • Whole-home renovations
  • Kitchen remodeling
  • Outdoor living

Harkins Construction & Remodeling

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #CBC1259047 22 yrs in business
(407) 571-3344

250 E Altamonte Drive, Altamonte Springs, FL 32701

Seminole County general contractor (CBC1259047) with 22 years specializing in renovations on 1960s–1980s CBS homes. Experienced identifying electrical, plumbing, and structural issues common in Altamonte Springs' older residential stock.

  • Home additions
  • 1970s-era renovation
  • Kitchen and bath remodels
  • Electrical updates
  • Plumbing upgrades
  • Permitted construction
  • Seminole County inspections

Synergy Construction Group

✓ Verified May 2026 FL DBPR #CGC1524811 14 yrs in business
(407) 834-2900

541 S Wymore Road, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714

Altamonte Springs general contractor (CGC1524811) specializing in whole-home renovations, kitchen and bathroom remodels, room additions, and custom home construction throughout Seminole County. Transparent cost-plus contracts, dedicated project manager per job.

  • Whole-home renovation
  • Kitchen remodeling
  • Bathroom remodeling
  • Room additions
  • Custom builds
  • CBS construction
  • Permit coordination
Listings are independently curated. We verify license status, address, phone, and service area before publishing. Read our methodology →

About Sanlando Springs

Typical home era: Mid-century ranches, 1950s–1970s, with extensive 1990s–2000s renovations

ZIP code: 32714

Sanlando Springs is one of the oldest established residential areas in Altamonte Springs — a wooded mid-century neighborhood centered on a series of natural springs and the Little Wekiva River.

Notable features:

  • Mature oak canopy
  • Adjacent to Sanlando Park and the Little Wekiva River
  • Lake Sanlando, Lake Lawne, and several smaller spring-fed lakes
  • Older homes often built on Florida limestone bedrock
  • Sweetwater Oaks subdivision adjacent

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a CGC and CBC license in Florida?
A Florida Certified General Contractor (CGC) license authorizes the holder to undertake construction of any commercial or residential structure, including unlimited square footage and complexity. A Florida Certified Building Contractor (CBC) license covers residential construction up to three stories and certain commercial projects. Both are issued by the Florida DBPR Construction Industry Licensing Board and are valid statewide — unlike registered contractor licenses, which are county-specific. For a Sanlando Springs renovation or rebuild, either license is appropriate. The key is statewide certification versus registered status, and verifying the license is active before signing anything.
Should a homeowner pull their own permit for a renovation in Seminole County?
Florida law permits homeowners to pull their own building permits as owner-builders, but doing so carries substantial risk. An owner-builder permit means you are serving as your own general contractor — legally responsible for all subcontractor licensing, inspections, and code compliance. More critically, Florida Statute 489.103 requires that owner-builder homes cannot be sold within one year of permit final without a disclosure to the buyer, which can affect resale and financing. Most real estate transactions also scrutinize unpermitted work or work pulled under owner-builder permits closely. For any significant project on a Sanlando Springs home, using a licensed contractor who pulls the permit in their own name is the lower-risk approach.
Is it better to renovate or tear down an older Sanlando Springs ranch?
The answer depends almost entirely on what's inside the walls. A 1960s ranch with original plumbing, a 60-amp electrical service, inadequate insulation, and a slab with moisture issues may cost more to bring fully up to current standards than a carefully designed new build on the same footprint — especially when you account for the disruption of living through or temporarily vacating during an extensive renovation. A teardown-rebuild gives you current energy codes, modern mechanical systems, and no hidden surprises. However, teardowns require demolition permits, tree protection plans, and new construction permits through Seminole County — a process that typically runs four to six months from application to construction start.
How does Florida's hurricane code affect renovation scope in older homes?
Florida adopted a significant revision to its building code following Hurricane Andrew in 1992 and again after the 2004–2005 hurricane seasons. Renovations that exceed 50% of the assessed value of the structure can trigger full code compliance for the entire structure under Florida's substantial improvement rule — meaning the entire home may need to be brought up to current wind load, opening protection, and structural requirements, not just the portion being renovated. This threshold is particularly relevant for flood zone properties, which Seminole County administers under FEMA's National Flood Insurance Program guidelines. A knowledgeable contractor should identify this threshold before finalizing renovation scope.
What hidden issues should I expect in a Sanlando Springs home from the 1960s or 1970s?
Homes built in this era in Central Florida commonly present: cast-iron drain lines that have corroded or collapsed; galvanized supply lines with reduced flow from mineral buildup; original 60- or 100-amp Federal Pacific or Zinsco electrical panels that present fire risk and are no longer insurable with many carriers; single-pane jalousie or aluminum windows with no hurricane protection; and slab moisture barriers that are absent or degraded. Flat or low-slope roofs from this era often have inadequate drainage. A pre-purchase or pre-renovation inspection by a Florida-licensed home inspector, followed by targeted specialist evaluations of plumbing and electrical, will map the scope before you commit to a budget.

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