Gold Beech Construction

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Gold Beech Construction is a luxury residential construction firm specializing in architecturally driven renovations, additions, and custom homes in Massachusetts.

06/17/2026

When we started demolition on this floor system, we found a number of defects that didn't meet our standards of construction. Joists were significantly out of level across both stories, original subfloor panels measured 2x4 feet, and critical hardware was missing.

So we stripped all existing subfloor panels, sistered new joists onto the old, and re-leveled the whole system to within 1/16". Now the new subfloor lands on a surface that's dead flat and ready for what comes next.

These tolerances and this attention to detail are what separate basic construction from multi-generational luxury construction.

Three projects, five categories, five awards. The team took home three GOLD and two SILVER awards at the  awards last ni...
06/04/2026

Three projects, five categories, five awards. The team took home three GOLD and two SILVER awards at the awards last night.

We didn’t set out to chase awards. We set out to build homes we could be proud of. When the work is recognized, it gives us momentum to push forward. It reinforces the standards we hold and deepens our gratitude to the people who uphold them.

To the clients who trusted us inside their homes, the trade partners who upheld our standards, and the entire Gold Beech Construction team (past and present): we’re grateful beyond words. This is the purpose and passion we carry into every build. We’re committed to Build With Integrity, Elevate the Experience, Execute with Purpose, Commit to the Team, and Honor Craft & Community.

Recognition follows the work, never the other way around.

Thank you to the entire team that made this possible:

GOLD - Addition Over $500K: Architecture by

GOLD - Basement: Designed by Jenna Croteau,

GOLD - Specialty Exterior: Designed by

SILVER - Best Architectural Design: Architecture by

SILVER - Interior Project: Design by Jenna Croteau,

05/28/2026

This I-beam connects the existing house to the new addition. During demolition, we discovered the original floor system wasn't properly fastened or supported by the beam.

Surprises like this are part of major renovations. The difference is in how they're handled. We modified the connection to properly support the floor system, communicated the issue immediately, and adjusted the schedule without derailing the project.

Pre-construction planning accounts for unknowns. But when something surfaces mid-project, clients need solutions, not just problems. This is what proactive project management looks like when the unexpected becomes reality.

Good builders find issues. Great ones solve them without creating chaos.

Architect: Arthur Chang
Engineer: Weiss Engineering
Builder:

05/21/2026

Most builders would have just hung a door and called it sound control. Actual acoustic separation requires addressing the entire assembly.

We gutted this stairwell down to the framing, applied caulking at all seams and installed Rockwool insulation in all wall cavities. New 5/8"" blueboard and plaster was then installed to add the mass necessary to attenuate sound between floors. The flush door integrates into the architectural design while completing the acoustic barrier, with an STC-rated drop-down sweep at the threshold.

The clients came back two years after we finished their lower level because they knew we'd solve it properly. Repeat work isn't just about satisfaction with the first project. It's about trust in how we approach the next one.

05/14/2026

Floor-to-ceiling Starphire glass with fully integrated channels. No surface-mounted clips, no obstructions, no compromises on the sightlines.

Most contractors push back on this detail because it requires precise coordination between framing, tile, and glass. We build it as standard because when a design specifies clean glass from floor to ceiling, that's what should be delivered.

The integrated channels are recessed into the floor, walls, and ceiling during framing and tile layout. The glass sits without hardware breaking up the visual or competing with the material palette.

This is how shower glass should be executed when the design intent matters as much as the function.

05/07/2026

This wall used to be the exterior facade of the house. Now it's one of the defining features of the project.

Instead of covering it with plaster or wallpaper, we left it exposed. The original brick creates a natural transition point between the existing home and the new addition, connecting old and new without forcing either to dominate.

Good additions don't erase what came before. They find ways to make the history part of the story.

04/27/2026

Doorstops don't get much thought during design. But wall-mounted stops damage baseboards and floor-mounted pegs become obstacles you're constantly cleaning around.

We use magnetic recessed doorstops that sit flush with the floor until the door passes over them. The pin only engages when needed, then retracts completely.

No wall damage. Clean floor lines. Nothing interfering with furniture placement or daily maintenance.

04/13/2026

Most hidden doors are built for novelty. This one addresses a circulation problem.

In this existing layout, a standard swing door would have obstructed the walkway and disrupted flow between spaces. Rather than letting the door dictate how the room functions, we leveraged the extended jamb depth from the existing brick construction to reverse the hinge direction and integrate a Murphy door system.

The solution provides seamless access to the reading nook without sacrificing floor space, while the integrated bookshelf maintains both storage capacity and the design intent of the library.

Hidden doors are often dismissed as gimmicks. But when they solve a functional problem, they become smart design.

03/25/2026

The larger the project, the longer you're exposed to the weather. Snow and rain are inevitable, but poor planning and sequencing can directly impact production efficiency if site conditions aren't managed proactively.

Before materials are delivered, we remove the top layer of loam from the jobsite and install 2 to 3 inches of gravel across all access and staging areas. Not for appearance, but for control over the environment.

Removing the loam and adding gravel allows the site to drain during heavy rain. Materials stay clean and dry, crews aren't working in mud, and both the house and street stay clean throughout the project.

This is how a jobsite should be prepared before the real work starts.

Address

Lexington, MA

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