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General Contractor in Camden, ME

Most homes in Camden weren't built for the way people live now. They were built well, but for a different time. That's where the real conversation about construction starts.


Kenneth Cox Construction has spent more than 25 years working on homes and commercial properties across MidCoast Maine. We know what's behind the walls of these buildings, what holds up and what doesn't, and what it actually takes to renovate a home in a town where the housing stock spans two centuries and the permit process expects you to know what you're doing. If you're planning a project in Camden, call us at (207) 651-4027 to start the conversation.

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Celebrating 250+ completed projects since 1997. Gold and burgundy circular emblem.

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General Contractor in Camden, ME

As a general contractor in Camden, ME, Kenneth Cox Construction brings over 25 years of experience in construction, remodeling, renovation, and roofing, helping homeowners and businesses navigate the structural, permitting, and weather challenges unique to MidCoast Maine.

Smiling carpenter with house and interior remodeling examples.
Celebrating 250+ completed projects since 1997. Gold and burgundy circular emblem.

Your Vision, Our Craftsmanship

General Contractor in Camden, ME

As a general contractor in Camden, ME, Kenneth Cox Construction brings over 25 years of experience in construction, remodeling, renovation, and roofing, helping homeowners and businesses navigate the structural, permitting, and weather challenges unique to MidCoast Maine.

Most homes in Camden weren't built for the way people live now. They were built well, but for a different time. That's where the real conversation about construction starts.

Kenneth Cox Construction has spent more than 25 years working on homes and commercial properties across MidCoast Maine. We know what's behind the walls of these buildings, what holds up and what doesn't, and what it actually takes to renovate a home in a town where the housing stock spans two centuries and the permit process expects you to know what you're doing.


If you're planning a project in Camden, call us at (207) 651-4027 to start the conversation.

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New Addition Construction and Custom Home Builder

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Full Home Renovation Construction Company

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Design Build & Construction Services

YOU DREAM IT, WE MAKE IT AFFORDABLE.

Hear from some MidCoast Maine homeowners we've helped:

Five black stars in a row.

Ken is amazing! He's down to earth, tells you how things are to give you options. He created a kitchen during the pandemic when you couldn't order a single item and the result is amazing. He transformed a cave bathroom into spa heaven.

Denise K.

A white kitchen with overhead cabinets, a stove, and a window with a checkered curtain.
Five black stars arranged horizontally.

You Will Not Be Disappointed!

We hired Ken and his crew to do all the carpentry work on an inn in Camden that we were totally remodeling... His crew members are a pleasure to work with - all very pleasant and polite, with a no nonsense approach to the day's work. Can't say enough about what a find he and his crew were to our project.

Carolyn B.

Interior view of a cabin with wood walls and ceiling, wood-burning stove, and a dark floor.
Five black stars in a row.

Renovating a kitchen in an old house is usually full of surprises, but Kenneth’s knowledge and experience made it go smoothly... Kenneth is straightforward and a pleasure to work with; his crew is respectful and hardworking. I am so pleased his work that I have already arranged for him to do another project.

S. Kynes

Kitchen with sunlight streaming through large windows, illuminating cabinets, countertops, and two bar stools.
Gray kitchen cabinets and appliances; beige countertops and floor.
Navy blue kitchen with white countertops and island, wooden floors, and woven pendant lights.

Where Most Camden Projects Actually Begin

They rarely start with a blueprint. What we see most often in homes around here is a homeowner standing in a kitchen that hasn't changed since the 1970s, or looking at a bathroom ceiling that's starting to sag, or realizing that the cottage on the lake needs to work twelve months a year instead of four. The project starts with a problem or a limitation — not a design magazine.


In older homes along High Street or near the Knox Mill complex on Mechanic Street, the starting point is often a structural issue that's been patched over more than once. A floor that slopes. A door frame that's shifted. A basement wall that's been leaking since before the current owner moved in. These aren't emergencies on day one, but they become the project once someone finally decides to address what's been bothering them for years.



We've been through this enough times in Camden to know how the first conversation usually goes — and what the next three months of planning will look like once we walk through the house together.

Gray kitchen cabinets and appliances; beige countertops and floor.
Navy blue kitchen with white countertops and island, wooden floors, and woven pendant lights.

Where Most Camden Projects Actually Begin

Most projects don’t start with a blueprint. They start with a problem. A kitchen that hasn’t changed since the 70s. A bathroom ceiling starting to sag. A seasonal cottage that needs to work year-round.


In older homes near High Street or the Knox Mill area, we often uncover:

  • Sloping floors
  • Shifting door frames
  • Leaking foundations
  • Aging structural systems


These aren’t emergencies until they are.

We walk the house with you. We look behind the walls. Then we map out what makes sense.

Gray kitchen cabinets and appliances; beige countertops and floor.
Navy blue kitchen with white countertops and island, wooden floors, and woven pendant lights.

Hidden Problems That Shape Every Project in Camden

Most Camden homes tell a story before any work begins. A kitchen frozen in the 1970s, a bathroom ceiling giving way, or a cottage that suddenly needs to be year-round often sparks the first conversation about a project.


In older homes along High Street or near the Knox Mill complex on Mechanic Street, the starting point is often a structural issue that's been patched over more than once. Floors slope, door frames shift, and basement walls leak slowly over time. These problems may not feel urgent at first, but once addressed, they often define the entire scope of construction.


We've been through this enough times in Camden to know how the first conversation usually goes and what the next three months of planning will look like once we walk through the house together.

From a Rough Idea to a Scope That Makes Sense

Most homeowners we talk to have a general sense of what they want but haven't worked through the specifics — and that's fine. Our job at this stage is to look at the house, understand the structure, and help you figure out what's realistic for your budget, timeline, and what the town allows.


Camden's permit process is more involved than most towns in the area. Shoreland zoning, Design Review in the downtown area, setback requirements on waterfront and lakefront lots — these aren't optional, and they shape what you can build, where, and how. We handle that navigation as part of the project. You shouldn't have to learn municipal code to remodel your kitchen.



If you're weighing options and want to understand what a project would actually involve, call us at (207) 651-4027. We'll tell you what we see, what it means, and what makes sense to do next.

Gray kitchen cabinets and appliances; beige countertops and floor.
Navy blue kitchen with white countertops and island, wooden floors, and woven pendant lights.

From a Rough Idea to a Scope That Makes Sense

Most homeowners know what they want, but not what it takes to get there. That’s normal.


We help you define:


  • What’s structurally realistic
  • What fits your budget
  • What Camden allows


Camden’s permit process can include:


  • Shoreland zoning
  • Design Review (downtown)
  • Waterfront setback rules


We handle the process so you don’t have to study the municipal code.

Gray kitchen cabinets and appliances; beige countertops and floor.
Navy blue kitchen with white countertops and island, wooden floors, and woven pendant lights.

Turning Ideas Into a Clear Construction Scope

Most homeowners start with a general idea. Our role as your general contractor is to look at the structure, assess what is realistic, and shape a scope that fits your budget, timeline, and the town's requirements.


Camden's permit process is more involved than most towns in the area. Shoreland zoning, Design Review in the downtown area, setback requirements on waterfront and lakefront lots — these aren't optional, and they shape what you can build, where, and how. We handle that navigation as part of the project. You shouldn't have to learn municipal code to remodel your kitchen.


If you’re considering a project, call (207) 651-4027, and we’ll walk through what makes sense.

Gray kitchen cabinets and appliances; beige countertops and floor.
Navy blue kitchen with white countertops and island, wooden floors, and woven pendant lights.
Wooden deck attached to a house with stairs. Black railings, tan siding, and a gravel base.

What Happens When Camden Projects Get Postponed

This is one of those problems that looks straightforward until it starts here. A stone foundation that's been weeping for three winters doesn't just stay damp — the mortar joints deteriorate, the sill plate softens, and what was a waterproofing issue becomes a framing issue. We see this cycle regularly in the older homes around Chestnut Street.


Roofing is the same. Ice dams don't just damage shingles — they push water under the roof deck, into the insulation, and down into walls where it sits for months before anyone notices. Postponing a roof replacement in a town with 60 inches of snow and freeze-thaw cycles from November through March turns a 15,000 project into a 40,000 one.



When something feels like it's getting worse, it usually is. Reach out before the scope grows beyond what you originally planned.

Wooden deck attached to a house with stairs. Black railings, tan siding, and a gravel base.

What Happens When Camden Projects Get Postponed

Small issues grow fast in Maine weather.


A damp foundation becomes framing damage.

Ice dams can lead to interior water damage.

A simple roof replacement becomes a structural repair.


Camden sees heavy snow and freeze-thaw cycles.

Waiting usually increases costs, not the other way around.


If something feels like it’s getting worse, it probably is.

Wooden deck attached to a house with stairs. Black railings, tan siding, and a gravel base.

Why Waiting Costs More in Camden

Small structural problems rarely stay small in coastal Maine. A stone foundation that remains wet for multiple winters can lead to mortar deterioration, framing damage, and more extensive structural repairs. We see this cycle regularly in the older homes around Chestnut Street.



Roofing issues follow the same pattern. Ice dams force water under shingles and into insulation and framing. In a town that sees heavy snow and long freeze-thaw cycles, postponing roof work can turn a manageable project into a structural repair.

When something feels like it is getting worse, it usually is. Acting early protects your investment.

What the Houses and the Land Tell Us in Camden

Camden's housing stock runs from late-1700s Federal to contemporary custom builds on view lots — but the construction challenges cluster around a few patterns. Homes built before 1900 almost always sit on granite or fieldstone foundations. These foundations were built to last, and many have, but after 150 years, the mortar joints need repointing, the sill plates need inspection, and moisture management is an ongoing reality.


What usually happens next in this part of town — particularly along the residential streets near Route 52 and in the neighborhoods within walking distance of Camden Hills Regional High School — is that a homeowner starts a kitchen remodel and discovers the subfloor is soft, or the wiring is original knob-and-tube, or the plumbing is still galvanized pipe. The project grows because the house reveals what it's been hiding. We plan for that from the beginning, not as an afterthought.



South- and west-facing walls take the hardest beating from sun and rain cycling. Wood rot on clapboard, window sills, and trim is persistent. Carpenter ants find the softened wood before homeowners do. We check everything during our initial walkthrough.

Gray kitchen cabinets and appliances; beige countertops and floor.
Navy blue kitchen with white countertops and island, wooden floors, and woven pendant lights.

What Camden Homes Reveal Once Work Begins

Camden's housing stock runs from late-1700s Federal to contemporary custom builds on view lots, but the construction challenges cluster around a few patterns. Homes built before 1900 almost always sit on granite or fieldstone foundations. These foundations were built to last, and many have, but after 150 years, the mortar joints need repointing, the sill plates need inspection, and moisture management is an ongoing reality.


What usually happens next in this part of town, particularly along the residential streets near Route 52 and in the neighborhoods within walking distance of Camden Hills Regional High School, is that a homeowner starts a kitchen remodel and discovers the subfloor is soft, or the wiring is original knob-and-tube, or the plumbing is still galvanized pipe.



Projects grow because homes reveal what they have been hiding. We plan for those discoveries from the beginning.

Gray kitchen cabinets and appliances; beige countertops and floor.
Navy blue kitchen with white countertops and island, wooden floors, and woven pendant lights.

Questions We Hear From Homeowners in Camden, ME

  • How long does it take to get a building permit in Camden?

    It depends on the scope and location. Standard permits can take a few weeks. Projects in the shoreland zone, the historic district, or those requiring Design Review or zoning board approval can take longer — sometimes 2 to 3 months. We build this into the project timeline from the start, so it doesn't become a surprise delay.

  • How long will my renovation take?

    A kitchen remodel in an older Camden home typically runs 8 to 14 weeks, depending on structural work, custom cabinetry lead times, and what we find behind the walls. Full home renovations can run several months. We give you a realistic timeline upfront, not an optimistic one.

  • What drives the cost of a project in Camden?

    The age of the home, the condition of the structure behind the finishes, permit requirements, material choices, and whether the project is on a waterfront or lakefront lot with additional zoning constraints. Properties closer to Camden Hills State Park or the bay often involve access and site logistics that affect cost as well.

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  • Do you work on commercial properties too?

    Yes. We handle commercial build-outs, inn and B&B renovations, and adaptive reuse projects. The process is different from residential — different codes, different timelines, different inspections — and we're set up for both.

  • Do you offer any warranty?

    We provide a 2-year warranty on all of our work. We're also BBB certified. When something is done, we stand behind it.

Your easy 3-step process to your dream home

1

GET YOUR FREE QUOTE FROM US TODAY.

We start with a detailed conversation about your construction goals, budget parameters, and timeline expectations. This discovery phase ensures we fully understand your needs and can provide accurate recommendations tailored to your specific situation.


2

Detailed Planning & Pricing

Our team develops a comprehensive project plan with itemized pricing for all materials and labor. You receive a written estimate that clearly outlines every cost, timeline milestone, and quality specification, ensuring complete transparency before work begins.


3

Skilled Construction Delivery

We execute your project with licensed contractors, quality materials, and consistent oversight. Throughout construction, we maintain clear communication, respect your property, and deliver workmanship that meets the high standards we've maintained since 1990.

Trust Kenneth Cox Construction to be the best construction services for your Maine project.

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Transparent & Itemized Pricing

We provide detailed, itemized estimates that break down every cost associated with your project. Our transparent pricing includes materials, labor, and contingencies, eliminating surprise expenses and giving you complete financial clarity from start to finish.

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Financial Stability & Protection

Our BBB certification and 35-year business history demonstrate financial stability and professional accountability. We carry proper insurance and bonding to protect your property and investment, giving you security that unlicensed contractors cannot provide.

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Efficient Project Management

We complete projects on schedule using efficient construction management and skilled craftsmen. Time is money, and our organized approach minimizes delays, reduces costs, and gets you back to normal life faster than contractors who lack proper planning.

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Guaranteed customer satisfaction

We offer a 2 year warranty on all of our work, so you can have peace of mind with our work knowing it'll be done right the first time.