Anstead Construction, LLC

Anstead Construction, LLC Anstead Construction, LLC is family owned and operated since 1995. So much so, we would sign our name on every project we do.

We still adhere to the same values we started with almost 30 years ago - deliver our customers a quality, personalized, handcrafted project on which we will proudly sign our name! Anstead Construction, LLC still operates under the same principles that we started with in 1995. Our projects are a firm testament to these ethics of providing every client quality service, materials and craftsmanship.

Our "family" of employees cares about you, your project and your total satisfaction with your construction experience. Let us sign our name on your project.

Groundbreaking ceremony for Extol of Ohio, April 22, 2026.
04/24/2026

Groundbreaking ceremony for Extol of Ohio, April 22, 2026.

Congratulations to Extol on their $6mil expansion project! Anstead Construction is honored to have been selected as your...
04/24/2026

Congratulations to Extol on their $6mil expansion project! Anstead Construction is honored to have been selected as your general contractor and we are pleased to have Gateway Design Build partnering with us!

Extol of Ohio to add 67,500 square feet, create 35 jobs by 2029

As 2025 comes to a close, we take a moment to reflect on our journey over the past 30 years, from humble beginnings to o...
12/31/2025

As 2025 comes to a close, we take a moment to reflect on our journey over the past 30 years, from humble beginnings to our current standing as a family-owned business. We extend our deepest gratitude to all who have contributed to our growth, including family, friends, colleagues, and valued clients, whose support has been instrumental in Anstead Construction's success. We express our sincere appreciation for your role in our achievements and look forward to 2026 with enthusiasm, eager to collaborate with new individuals and help them bring their visions to life.

Happy New Year from all of the Anstead Family!

12/21/2025

Shared by a friend of ours. This post is appropriate no matter what time of year.
How much time can you give of your day, week or month to help someone else in need? ❤️

"My name's Marvin. I'm 70. I work the returns desk at Ace Hardware on Meridian Street. People bring back the wrong screws, paint that doesn't match, tools they can't figure out how to use. Most of my job is printing receipts and putting things back on shelves.

But sometimes people return things for a different reason.
Like the woman who brought back a toilet repair kit, unopened. Receipt was three days old.
"Something wrong with it?" I asked.
She wouldn't look at me. "I... I watched a YouTube video. It's too complicated. I can't fix it myself."
"You got a plumber coming?"

Long silence. "I can't afford a plumber. We'll just... we'll figure it out."
I looked at that kit. $12.99. Toilet repair isn't complicated if someone shows you once.
"What time you get off work?" I asked.
She blinked. "What?"
"I get off at 4. I could swing by, show you how to do it. Ten minutes, tops."
"I can't pay you."
"Good, 'cause I'm not a plumber. Just an old man who's fixed a thousand toilets. Consider it customer service."

I went to her house that evening. Showed her how to replace the flapper valve. She cried when the toilet stopped running.
"You have no idea what this means," she said. "Water bill's been killing us."

I started noticing other returns. The man returning caulk because "my hands shake too much." The elderly woman returning a smoke detector because "I can't reach the ceiling." The dad returning drywall repair because "I'll just hang a picture over the hole."
All of them were problems I could fix in twenty minutes.

So I made a decision. After work, I'd visit one person. Fix one thing. Just one simple repair that was drowning them.
Leaky faucets. Stuck windows. Loose railings. Burnt-out lights in high ceilings. Things that seem small until you can't afford to fix them or physically can't do it yourself.

My wife thought I was crazy. "Marvin, you work all day. Now you're working for free after?"
"It's not work," I said. "It's just fixing things."

Word spread quietly. People started coming to the returns desk asking if I was "the guy who helps." I'd write addresses on sticky notes, visit after my shift.

But here's what broke me: An elderly man came in, didn't return anything. Just stood at my desk crying. "My grandson told me about you. My wife fell last week. Our bathroom grab bar came loose. She's too scared to shower now. I'm 82, I can't install it myself. We can't afford help."

I went that night. Installed the grab bar properly. His wife hugged me so hard I thought my ribs would crack.
"You gave her dignity back," he whispered.

Now the store knows. My manager created "Marvin's Fix-It Hours." Two afternoons a week, I help customers with installations for free. The store donates materials for people who can't afford them. Other hardware stores started doing it. Home Depot has "Helper Hours." Lowe's does "Senior Assist."

I'm 70. I process returns at a hardware store.

But I've learned this, a broken toilet, a loose grab bar, a leaky faucet, these aren't small problems when you're broke or old or alone. They're the difference between dignity and despair.
So fix something for someone today. A neighbor's step. Your parent's door. Anything.

Because everyone deserves a home that works. And sometimes all it takes is twenty minutes and a screwdriver.
The world doesn't need more big gestures. It needs more people who notice the small broken things and just fix them."

By Grace Jenkins

Hometown Proud! 💙💛
12/08/2025

Hometown Proud! 💙💛

Game day is here, and our Lady Fliers are back on the court. Before we tip off the new season, we want to recognize the businesses who stepped up in a big way for our program. Their support helps every athlete in our gym and pushes our program forward at all levels!

Hangar Club
• Clyde Eagles 2291
• Croghan Colonial Bank

LFB Club Sponsors
• Anstead Construction
• Blue Collar Bistro
• Noir & Nectar Baked Goods
• Phaze 1 Screen Printing
• Wild Brew

Gold Club
• First National Bank
• Steinle Family Dealerships

Blue Club
• Riverview Industries
• Hartland Oil & Tires
• Happy Tees

Thank you to each one of these partners for backing our players, coaches, and community this season. We’re grateful for your support and excited for what’s ahead!

08/18/2025

Special shout out to Anstead Construction, LLC for the installation of our new windows in the press box!

This!
08/15/2025

This!

“My name’s Frank. I’m 64, a retired electrician.
Forty-two years I spent running wires through houses, fixing breakers, making sure people had light in their kitchens and heat in their winters. Never once did anyone ask me where I went to college. Mostly, they just wanted to know if I could get the power back on before their ice cream melted.

Last May, I was at my granddaughter Emily’s school career day. You know the drill — doctors, lawyers, a software guy in a slick suit talking about “scaling startups.” I was the only one there with a tool belt and work boots.

When it was my turn, I told the kids, “I don’t have a degree. I’ve never sat in a lecture hall. But I’ve wired schools, hospitals, and your principal’s house. And when the hospital generator failed during a snowstorm in ’98, I was the one in the basement with a flashlight, keeping the lights on for newborn babies upstairs.”

The kids leaned forward. They had questions — real ones. “How do you fix stuff in the dark?” “Do you make a lot of money?” “Do you ever get zapped?” (Yes, once, and it’ll curl your hair.)

When the bell rang, one boy hung back. Small kid, freckles, hoodie too big for him. He mumbled, “My uncle’s a plumber. People laugh at him ’cause he didn’t finish high school. But… he’s the only one in the family who can fix anything.”

I looked that boy in the eye and said, “Kid, your uncle’s a hero. When your toilet overflows at midnight, Harvard ain’t sending anyone. A plumber is.”

Here’s the thing nobody told me when I was young — the world doesn’t run without tradespeople. You can have all the engineers you want, but if nobody builds the house, wires the power, or lays the pipes, those blueprints just sit in a drawer.

We’ve made it sound like trades are what you do if you can’t go to college, instead of a path you choose because you like working with your hands, solving problems, and seeing your work stand solid for decades.

Four years after high school, some kids walk away with diplomas. Others walk away with zero debt, a union card, and a skill they can take anywhere in the world. And guess what? When your furnace dies in January, it’s not the diploma that saves you.

A few weeks ago, that same freckled kid’s mom stopped me at the grocery store. She said, “You probably don’t remember, but you told my son trades are important. He’s shadowing his uncle this summer. First time I’ve seen him excited about anything in years.”

That’s the part we forget — for some kids, knowing their path is respected changes everything. It’s not about “just” fixing wires or pipes. It’s about pride. Purpose. The kind that sticks with you long after the job’s done.

So next time you meet a teenager, don’t just ask, “Where are you going to college?” Ask, “What’s your plan?” And if they say, “I’m learning to weld,” or “I’m starting an apprenticeship,” smile big and say, “That’s fantastic. We’re going to need you.”

Because we will. More than ever. And when the lights go out, you’ll be glad they showed up.”

See you all next year! 🇺🇸❤️
07/06/2025

See you all next year! 🇺🇸❤️

Thanks to our generous donors and the community for the turnout today. We hope you enjoyed it as much as we did!

Address

1856 County Road 207
Fremont, OH
43420

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 4pm
Tuesday 8am - 4pm
Wednesday 8am - 4pm
Thursday 8am - 4pm
Friday 8am - 4pm

Telephone

+14196393162

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