
A Renovation Without Downtime Isn’t an Accident
For most business owners, a commercial remodel is a high-stakes disruption dressed up as an improvement project. Every week the space is torn up is a week of lost revenue, frustrated customers, or delayed openings. At D56 Construction, we treat the schedule with the same rigor as the design itself — because a beautiful build that runs three months over budget isn’t actually a win. As a commercial general contractor working across Harrisburg, Hershey, and the wider Central PA market, we’ve learned that the projects that go smoothly are the ones where the timeline is set honestly before a single wall comes down.
Pre-Construction Sets the Real Timeline
Every large remodel starts in pre-construction, and this is the phase most owners underestimate. Before permits are pulled or subcontractors are scheduled, our team works through architectural drawings, engineering coordination, municipal code review, and — for many Central PA commercial spaces — ADA compliance requirements that can reshape a floor plan entirely. We also finalize material lead times during this stage, since a six-week wait on custom fixtures or specialty finishes can quietly derail an otherwise tight schedule.
Permitting and Approvals Run in Parallel, Not Series
Municipal permitting is often the single biggest variable in a commercial timeline, and it’s where inexperienced contractors lose weeks. We submit for permits as early as documents allow and run approvals alongside procurement and subcontractor scheduling rather than waiting for a green light before doing anything else. For restaurant and retail buildouts in particular, this often means coordinating with health departments, fire marshals, and zoning boards simultaneously. Owners who’ve been through a remodel with a less experienced team know how much time this parallel approach can save.
Demolition and Rough-In: The Phase Clients Notice Least
Once permits clear, demolition and rough-in work — framing, electrical, plumbing, HVAC — move quickly but are the least visible part of the process to the client. This is where a detailed pre-construction plan pays off, because unexpected conditions behind walls or under floors are far less likely to stall the schedule when the team has already anticipated them. We keep clients updated on progress throughout this phase even though there’s little to see, because silence during the “ugly” middle of a project is often what erodes trust.
Finishes Are Where the Vision Becomes Visible
The finish-out phase — flooring, millwork, lighting, fixtures, signage — is where a commercial space starts to look like the renderings clients approved months earlier. It’s also where quality control matters most, since finish work is what customers, guests, and employees will actually see and touch every day. We build in dedicated walkthroughs at this stage specifically to catch and correct issues before they become part of the punch list, rather than after.
The Punch List Shouldn’t Be a Surprise
A well-run remodel treats the punch list as a formality, not a scramble. Because our team documents quality benchmarks throughout the build rather than waiting until the end, the final walkthrough typically surfaces only minor items — a touch-up here, an adjustment there — instead of the kind of last-minute deficiencies that delay a grand opening. This is the difference between a contractor managing a timeline and a contractor simply hoping to hit one.
Plan Your Timeline Before You Plan Your Opening Date
If you’re a business owner in Harrisburg, Hershey, or anywhere in Central PA considering a commercial remodel, the timeline conversation should happen before the design conversation, not after. At D56 Construction, we build honest schedules into every large-scale commercial project we take on, from restaurant renovations to full tenant improvement buildouts. Ready to start planning your project? Contact D56 Construction today to talk through your timeline and scope.