The path to a house is not a straight line, but it must be manageable
In modular construction part of the work moves from the site to the factory. This speeds things up but requires more precise preparation up front.
At the first stage, you do not need a finished technical brief. What matters is understanding how the house will be used, where it will stand and what level of comfort is expected. From there, we move step by step toward the model, package and written offer.
We start with what you already know. From model, use and location, we move step by step toward a clear offer.

In modular construction part of the work moves from the site to the factory. This speeds things up but requires more precise preparation up front.
The better the model, package, installation spot, foundation and logistics are aligned, the calmer production and assembly become. We move step by step: first we understand the scenario, then choose a model or direction, then clarify the site, the package and the scope of work.
Only after that does it make sense to talk about the final offer. This order feels slower at the start but saves time closer to assembly.
We define whether the house is for year-round living, guests, rental, a sauna, a summer home or a commercial project.
We review area, room count, terraces, ceiling height and the feel of space.
We check country, region, access, possible foundation, utilities and the area for assembly.
We discuss the required readiness level: base kit, finishes, engineering or add-ons.
We lock down the written scope, price, exclusions, timing and next decisions.
After agreement, fabrication of the elements or the house kit begins.
The house arrives at a prepared site where foundation, equipment, access and the work order are already clear.
None of this has to be final. These are simply directions that let our first reply be more concrete.
A catalog model, or desired square meters and room count.
Living, rental, guest house, office, summer home or other.
Destination country and site region, if already known.
Whether the building will be used year-round or mainly seasonally.
A simpler base level, an insulated solution or a more finished interior.
Desired timing and budget direction, if already clear.
Access, foundation logic and installation conditions affect the final solution. That is why we clarify them before the written offer.

Modules are built inside a production hall, where weather does not interfere and joint precision is easier to keep. Electrical, water and sewage routes are installed inside walls and floors before surfaces are closed - this gives a clean, hidden-utilities picture on site. The logic of optional equipment (for example, rooftop solar panels or a water heater) is agreed at package level before production starts. The package scope and finish level for a specific model are confirmed in the written offer.
Real photo from the production hall. Production queue and lead time for a specific model are confirmed in the offer.


Delivery to the destination country across the European Union and to the site, assembly scope and required equipment are described in the written offer together with the price. The finished module is set in place by crane and the main assembly usually takes one to two working days, provided the foundation, access and local connections are ready for that date. Transport and assembly scope are calculated separately per project.
Real installation photo. Delivery, lifting equipment and assembly scope are calculated per project and confirmed in the offer.
Model, size and use logic are written down in plain terms.
Structure, materials and finish scope are spelled out.
Foundation, special works and on-site additions appear as separate lines.
Transport route, assembly scope and required equipment are described.
Production does not start until the offer is agreed with you.
These are the questions people think about before they even send a request. Honest answers below.
After your first message you get a personal reply. A few questions help us narrow down the model and package direction before we put the offer in writing.