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We framed out the entire space from scratch. Bedrooms, a living area, a dedicated storage zone - all planned and built out with proper framing, insulation, and electrical runs before a single sheet of drywall went up. Getting that foundation right is what separates a basement that feels like a real part of the home versus one that just feels like a finished basement.
The bathroom is probably what gets the most attention on this job. Black-framed glass shower enclosure, large-format marble-look tile on the walls and floor, black hexagon mosaic tile on the shower floor, a ceiling-mount rain head, and a double vanity with a quartz-style top and matte black hardware throughout. It's a sharp, cohesive look - and it was built from a bare concrete slab up.
The living room ended up being a great open space. Dark hardwood-look LVP runs through the entire level, recessed lighting in a smooth drywall ceiling, crown molding, and clean white baseboards throughout. The hallway leading to the bedrooms shows the same level of trim detail - it doesn't feel like a basement at all. That's the goal.
A job like this hits differently when you see the before and after side by side. What was once a cold, empty slab is now two bedrooms, a spacious living room, a full bathroom, and dedicated storage - all finished to the same standard as the main floors above. For homeowners in the Acworth area sitting on an unfinished basement, this is exactly the kind of square footage that changes how a home lives day to day.