Open Concept ยท St. Petersburg, CA

Open Concept in St. Petersburg, CA.

Open Concept for St. Petersburg homes, done by insured Tampa Bay remodelers we match to your project. The single biggest change you can make to a closed-off Tampa Bay kitchen is to take out the wall between it and the living room. We handle the demo, the structural check, the header or beam where the wall was load-bearing, the new drywall finish, and the floor patch so the open kitchen reads as one room with the rest of the house..

St. Petersburg: St. Petersburg's kitchens split along the same lines as its housing stock. Old Northeast and Kenwood are full of 1920s Craftsman bungalows with kitchens still boxed off from the dining room, and most remodels here open that wall while keeping the original trim, running $48,000-$95,000 for a full renovation. Florida's humidity favors plywood cabinet boxes over MDF in these older homes, since particleboard swells fast without steady air conditioning.
Open concept kitchen with the wall between kitchen and living room removed in a Tampa home
Local angle

Why is open concept different in St. Pete & Gulf Beaches?

Old Northeast bungalows have a similar load-bearing wall condition to Central Tampa, while barrier-island condo walls are more often non-load-bearing but still require HOA sign-off before any wall comes down, especially where a plumbing stack runs through it.

What's included in open concept in St. Petersburg?

  • Wall type check (load-bearing vs. partition) and structural review with the engineer of record
  • Permit pulling with the City of Tampa or your local Tampa Bay jurisdiction
  • Demo, debris haul-off, and dust containment with plastic and a HEPA air scrubber
  • LVL beam, flush header, or dropped header install with proper bearing points
  • New drywall, tape, mud, sand, and texture match to the existing ceiling and walls
  • Floor patch, transition, and baseboard match so the open room reads as one space

When does a St. Petersburg home need open concept?

  • Your kitchen is closed off from the family room and feels small
  • You want to watch kids or guests from the kitchen
  • The wall is not actually load-bearing and the demo is straightforward
  • You are doing a full kitchen remodel and want the new layout to be open
  • You want to add a kitchen island that flows into the living room

What do St. Petersburg homeowners ask about open concept?

How soon can a crew start open concept in St. Petersburg?

We can usually book a free in-home consult within the same week in St. Petersburg. Once your scope and quote are signed, your matched crew confirms a start date. A real person answers when you call, not a dispatcher.

What does open concept cost in St. Petersburg?

$5,500-$22,000. Pricing is the same across Tampa Bay, with no mileage upcharge for St. Petersburg. You get a written quote before any work starts.

How does St. Petersburg's climate affect this service?

St. Petersburg's kitchens split along the same lines as its housing stock. Old Northeast and Kenwood are full of 1920s Craftsman bungalows with kitchens still boxed off from the dining room, and most remodels here open that wall while keeping the original trim, running $48,000-$95,000 for a full renovation. Florida's humidity favors plywood cabinet boxes over MDF in these older homes, since particleboard swells fast without steady air conditioning.. Old Northeast bungalows have a similar load-bearing wall condition to Central Tampa, while barrier-island condo walls are more often non-load-bearing but still require HOA sign-off before any wall comes down, especially where a plumbing stack runs through it..

How much does it cost to open a kitchen wall in Tampa Bay?

A non-load-bearing wall removal in a Tampa Bay home runs $5,500-$9,500 including demo, drywall finish, floor patch, and paint. A load-bearing wall with an LVL beam runs $12,000-$22,000 depending on the span, the structural requirements, and the finish work needed to match the existing ceiling.

How do I know if a kitchen wall is load-bearing?

A wall is load-bearing if it carries weight from above (a second story, the roof, or a beam). The clearest sign is a structural beam or continuous foundation below. We confirm with a structural engineer on any wall we plan to remove, then pull the permit with the engineering letter attached.

Serving St. Petersburg

Planning open concept in St. Petersburg?

Call for a free in-home design consult and a written quote, no trip fee.