Reviews

What homeowners keep saying about the experience.

The specifics vary by project, but the themes are consistent: communication, cleanliness, quality, and a team that follows through.

Completed renovation by Kuechle Construction Co.
Current Google Business Profile average: 5.0 stars across 10 published reviews in the local review set.

What people actually point to

The same themes keep showing up.

People rarely describe good remodel experiences in vague terms. They talk about whether the team communicated clearly, kept the site clean, handled the schedule seriously, and delivered work that still feels solid after the project is over.

How to read reviews well

Look for patterns, not just praise.

The most useful reviews are the ones that help you judge how a builder behaves while the project is underway. Communication, schedule seriousness, cleanliness, and follow-through are usually better indicators than broad statements about being "great."

What the review mix suggests

The feedback spans additions, bathrooms, kitchens, and whole-home work.

That matters because it shows consistency across different project types, not just one narrow kind of success. It also helps homeowners connect the proof to the kind of work they are actually considering.

Communication

Homeowners remember whether they felt informed.

The strongest review signal is not hype. It is whether people felt the project stayed clear enough to trust.

Cleanliness

Site standards affect the experience every day.

Occupied-home work feels different when the crew treats containment, order, and respect for the home as part of the job.

Craftsmanship

The finished work still has to hold up after the review is written.

Good reviews tend to point to both the visible result and the confidence that the work was built the right way.

Additions

People notice whether the new work feels integrated and worth the disruption.

Addition reviews tend to expose whether process, sequencing, and finish continuity were strong enough to make the whole house feel better at the end.

Remodeling

Occupied-home work gets judged on behavior as much as result.

Homeowners remember communication quality, cleanliness, and whether the crew respected that real life was still happening in the house.

Long-term confidence

The strongest feedback points to work people still trust later.

That kind of review signal usually comes from clear standards, steady craftsmanship, and a team willing to stand behind the result.

"Andy did a bathroom remodel for me and it turned out amazing. He was polite, thorough, and always kept his agreed-upon timeline."

Ron Cooper Bathroom remodel

"Kuechle Construction completed multiple projects at our home, including a new room and screened-in porch addition. Great process and quality work."

Trisha Sonnesyn Addition and porch

"Great work, professional, high quality, reasonably priced, and easy to work with. They practically rebuilt our Plymouth home and stood behind their work."

Allen Kuperman, M.D. Whole-home renovation

"Communication was excellent and the team kept the work area very clean throughout the project."

Troy Voeltz, M.D. Kitchen remodel

"They are wonderful to work with and consistently strive for high-quality craftsmanship."

Donna Kaplan Porch addition

"Great craftsmanship and cleanliness."

Josiah Snidarich Residential project

Use reviews the right way

Read them for pattern, then pressure-test the fit in a real conversation.

If the communication, cleanliness, and craftsmanship themes matter to you, the next step is to bring your own project into the conversation and see how KCC thinks through scope, timing, and fit.

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