Aaron Gordon Construction — Luxury Remodels & Historic Restoration in San Francisco, CA

Aaron Gordon Construction — Luxury Remodels & Historic Restoration in San Francisco, CA

Aaron Gordon Construction has been building and renovating in San Francisco since 2000, working at the higher end of the residential market: architect-led gut renovations, historic home restorations, and custom new construction in Noe Valley, Pacific Heights, the Marina, and adjacent neighborhoods. The firm’s BuildZoom score of 121 places it in the top 1% of California licensed contractors. With 86 Yelp reviews, Aaron Gordon typically comes in through architect referrals and stays through word of mouth — a pattern that reflects a practice calibrated to clients with complex scopes who need a single accountable contractor from permit to punch list. Operations run out of Shafter Avenue in the Bayview, keeping the team embedded in San Francisco’s permit ecosystem.

Services

  • High-end kitchen remodeling — full design-build coordination, custom cabinetry, stone countertops, appliance specification
  • Luxury bathroom remodeling — wet-area waterproofing, imported tile, heated floors, steam shower installation
  • Historic home restoration — Victorian and Edwardian structural repair, period-accurate millwork, preservation-compliant finishes
  • Full home renovation — gut renovations from framing through final finishes across all trades
  • New construction — custom homes on infill lots and hillside properties with structural engineering coordination
  • Room additions — second-story expansions, rear additions, structural framing, permit management through close

Service area

San Francisco and the greater Bay Area, including the Peninsula. Particular depth in SF neighborhoods with historic preservation overlays, including the Western Addition, Haight-Ashbury, Noe Valley, and Pacific Heights.

Why it’s on home.renovation.reviews

25 years of SF-specific residential work gives Aaron Gordon’s team direct knowledge of DBI inspection sequencing, historic preservation requirements in designated districts, and the soft-story seismic conditions common in pre-1940 wood-frame buildings. That institutional experience is difficult to build any other way.

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