Rampart Homes, Inc. Remodeling and Additions in Sarasota for 32 years

Rampart Homes, Inc. Remodeling and Additions in Sarasota for 32 years John King is licensed & insured and has been in business for 40 years. John King is also a Broker Realtor.

We specialize in renovation but also specialize in working within FEMA guidelines for remodels, new builds, lifting & repairs.

May Is National Home Remodeling Month — And It MattersMay is recognized throughout the building industry as National Hom...
05/01/2026

May Is National Home Remodeling Month — And It Matters
May is recognized throughout the building industry as National Home Remodeling Month, a time to highlight the value of professional remodeling and the importance of choosing the right contractor before beginning work on your home.
At Rampart Homes, we believe remodeling is far more than changing finishes or updating a room. A successful remodel requires careful planning, clear communication, proper budgeting, experienced supervision, licensed trades, and a realistic understanding of the existing home.
Every home has a history. Behind the walls may be older framing, outdated wiring, undersized HVAC systems, prior workmanship issues, moisture concerns, code changes, structural limitations, or conditions that are not visible until construction begins. That is why the early planning phase matters so much.
A good remodeler does not simply price a wish list. A good remodeler helps shape the project into a clear, buildable, code-conscious, and realistic plan.
Before starting a remodeling project, homeowners should ask:
Are the plans detailed enough for pricing and permitting?
Is the scope of work clearly written?
Are selections, allowances, and expectations defined?
Has the contractor considered existing conditions?
Are the trades properly licensed and insured?
Is there a clear process for communication, changes, and documentation?
May is a good reminder that remodeling should not be rushed. The best projects begin with thoughtful planning and the right professional guidance.
At Rampart Homes, our goal is to guide clients from concept to completion with quality craftsmanship, honest communication, and professional care.
Why Experience Matters
John King
CMRP | CGR | CGP | CAPS
State Certified Building Contractor, CBC1257785
Rampart Homes, Inc.
John King is one of only two Certified Master Remodelers in Florida and one of only 56 in the United States.
© 2026 Rampart Homes, Inc. All rights reserved. This article is provided for general informational purposes and reflects the experience and professional perspective of Rampart Homes, Inc.

04/25/2026

The Unexamined Remodel Is Where People Lose Money

Socrates said the unexamined life isn’t worth living.

I’ll tell you this — the unexamined remodel is where people lose money.

Most homeowners don’t get into trouble because they picked the wrong tile, cabinet, or countertop.

They get into trouble because they start the remodeling process without real clarity.

They jump straight to pricing before they’ve fully thought through:

What they truly want.
What they actually need.
What their budget can responsibly support.
And how all those pieces fit together.

That’s where things start to drift.

Scope changes.
Selections change.
Costs climb.
Stress builds.

And suddenly, a project that should have been exciting starts to feel overwhelming.

At Rampart Homes, our job is not just to price your project.

Our job is to help you think it through properly before you spend money the wrong way.

We help homeowners take ideas, priorities, budget, and reality — and shape them into a clear, buildable plan.

That is where a good remodeling project begins.

If you’re thinking about remodeling and want to avoid costly mistakes, contact Rampart Homes at 941-925-4835 to schedule a Remodeling Clarity Session.

This is a focused one-hour working session at our office where we walk through your ideas, priorities, scope, budget, and possible next steps so you can move forward with clarity.

The session fee is $250. After the session, we will provide structured meeting notes and recommended next steps.

If you move forward with Rampart Homes’ Pre-Construction Services Agreement, the clarity session fee will be credited back.

Office sessions are held at Rampart Homes. On-site consultations may be available by request and may involve an additional travel fee depending on location and distance.

04/24/2026

Remodeling Starts With Clarity

One of the most important parts of a remodeling project happens before construction ever begins.

Most homeowners start with ideas, dreams, inspiration photos, and wish lists. That is a good place to begin. The challenge is that remodeling quickly becomes more complex once selections, design options, construction details, existing conditions, and budget all come into play.

A good remodeler helps the homeowner sort through three important categories:

What do you wish for?
What do you want?
What do you truly need?

Those are not always the same thing.

At Rampart Homes, we encourage clients to put their priorities on paper and rank them from most important to least important. That process helps reveal what matters most, what can be adjusted, and where the budget needs to be focused.

Every decision affects cost. Every selection matters. One choice often leads to another.

With 32 years of remodeling experience in Sarasota, Rampart Homes helps homeowners understand the possibilities, the limitations, the hidden conditions, and the budget realities before they get too far down the road.

The goal is not to take away the dream.

The goal is to build the dream with clarity, honesty, and a plan.

Rampart Homes, Inc.
Custom Homes | Remodeling | Additions
Sarasota, Florida

04/17/2026

Why Skipping a Building Permit in Florida Can Cost You When You Sell Your Home

By Rampart Homes

When it comes to work on your home, the wrong decision at the beginning can create problems that follow you for years.

At Rampart Homes, we believe homeowners deserve straight answers, proper guidance, and construction done the right way. One of the biggest mistakes a homeowner can make is allowing work to be done without the proper permits, especially when the work involves changes that should have been reviewed and documented from the start.

A lot of homeowners think that once the work is finished, the risk is over.

It is not.

One of the biggest misunderstandings in residential construction is the belief that if work gets done without a permit and nobody catches it at the time, then the issue is gone. In many cases, the opposite is true. The problem often shows up later, when the homeowner is trying to sell the home and the buyer begins reviewing the property more closely.

That is when unpermitted work has a way of coming back to the surface.

Sarasota County actively investigates unpermitted construction work and provides enforcement channels for those issues. That alone should make it clear that permit problems do not disappear just because the project has been completed.

Skipping the Permit Does Not Eliminate the Problem

When work requires a permit, that requirement does not go away because the walls were closed up and the job got finished.

All that happened is the problem was postponed.

Homeowners often discover this at the worst possible time — when they are under contract, trying to close, and suddenly questions start coming up about work that was never properly permitted.

How Unpermitted Work Gets Discovered

A lot of people assume this only comes out through title work. That is not usually the full picture.

More often, unpermitted work is discovered through the buyer’s home inspection, permit history review, appraisal, lender questions, insurance underwriting, seller disclosure obligations, or visible improvements that do not match the public record.

In Florida, real estate attorneys regularly warn that known unpermitted work can become a serious issue in a transaction and may need to be addressed before closing.

That means what felt like a shortcut years earlier can become a major problem when the house is finally on the market.

Home Inspections and Permit Records Matter

A good home inspector is supposed to notice what looks altered, relocated, enclosed, expanded, converted, or added. Buyers are also more informed than they used to be. They check public records. They compare what they see against the permit history. They ask questions when something does not line up.

That is especially true when the property has additions, converted rooms, major window or door changes, structural modifications, relocated plumbing, electrical work, HVAC work, roofing work, or deck and exterior alterations.

Once those questions start, the seller may find themselves explaining work they hoped would never come up.

Seller Disclosures Can Become a Problem

This is where many homeowners get themselves into a bad spot.

Florida law generally requires sellers to disclose known facts that materially affect the value of the property and are not readily observable. Real estate attorneys in Florida routinely identify unpermitted work as one of those issues.

That means keeping quiet and hoping nobody notices is not a solid plan.

It is a gamble.

The Sale Can Be Delayed, Renegotiated, or Lost

Once unpermitted work is discovered, the closing process can change fast.

The buyer may ask for documentation. The lender may want clarification. The insurer may raise concerns. The appraiser may question value or square footage. The buyer may ask for repairs, credits, or price reductions. The seller may be required to address the permit issue before the deal can close.

In some cases, the transaction gets delayed.

In other cases, it falls apart completely.

After-the-Fact Permits Are Often Required

A lot of people assume they can always fix permit issues later with paperwork.

Sometimes an after-the-fact permit is the next step. That does not mean it is easy. It can involve applications, inspections, opening up concealed work, plans, engineering, corrections, delays, and added expense. Sarasota County has noted in enforcement material that after-the-fact permits may not be available where the work violates code or other regulations.

That is the part too many people miss.

Skipping a permit does not erase the requirement. It often just delays the pain until a point when the stakes are higher and the fix is more expensive.

False Savings Usually Become Real Costs

This is where the fake economy shows itself.

Maybe the homeowner saved permit fees at the beginning. Maybe they thought they avoided hassle. Then years later they are paying for inspections, engineering, corrections, opened walls, closing delays, buyer concessions, and stress that never should have existed in the first place.

That is not saving money.

That is paying later, with interest.

This Connects Directly to Hiring the Right Contractor

A professional, licensed contractor should know when permits are required and should not be steering a homeowner into work that creates future resale problems.

Florida DBPR advises homeowners to verify licenses and stresses the importance of using properly licensed contractors for residential construction work.

Unlicensed work and unpermitted work often go hand in hand. When someone says, “You do not need a permit,” on work that clearly requires one, that should put a homeowner on alert immediately.

Final Thoughts

A permit is not just paperwork.

It is part of the legal and practical record of the house. It is part of protecting the owner, the buyer, the lender, the insurer, and the value of the property itself. When that record is missing on work that should have been permitted, the problem has a way of resurfacing — and it often resurfaces when the homeowner is trying to sell.

That is when people learn the hard way that getting away with it for a while is not the same as getting away with it for good.

Do it right the first time.

It is cheaper, cleaner, and far less painful than trying to explain unpermitted work when a buyer is standing at the finish line.

Call to Action

Before you remodel, add on, alter structure, move plumbing, replace major systems, or perform any work that may require a permit, get real guidance from a licensed professional.

At Rampart Homes, we believe homeowners should understand what they are getting into before the work starts — not when the house is under contract and the closing is on the line.

Do not let unpermitted work come back to hurt your sale.
Do not let shortcuts become future liabilities.
Get the job evaluated properly from the start.

Rampart Homes, Inc.
4401 Ashton Road, Suite E
Sarasota, FL 34233
941-925-4835
[email protected]

© 2026 Rampart Homes, Inc. All rights reserved.
This article is provided for general informational purposes and reflects the experience and professional perspective of Rampart Homes, Inc.

04/15/2026

Why You Should Never Hire an Unlicensed Contractor in Florida
By Rampart Homes

When it comes to work on your home, the wrong decision at the beginning can create problems that follow you for years.

At Rampart Homes, we believe homeowners deserve straight answers, proper guidance, and construction done the right way. One of the biggest mistakes a homeowner can make is hiring an unlicensed contractor for work that should be handled by a properly licensed and insured professional.

What may look cheaper at first often ends up costing far more.
A lot of homeowners do not realize how serious this is until the damage is already done. They assume the person doing the work knows what they are doing. They assume permits will be pulled. They assume insurance is in place. They assume the low price means they found a smart deal.

A lot of times, none of that is true.
A licensed contractor carries real responsibilities that an unlicensed person often avoids. That includes licensing requirements, insurance, workers’ compensation obligations where required, permit compliance, inspections, documentation, and accountability. Florida’s licensing system exists as part of the state’s consumer protection structure, and Sarasota County actively investigates unpermitted work and unlicensed contracting.
A Cheap Price Can Become an Expensive Problem
One of the biggest traps for homeowners is focusing only on the upfront number.
A licensed and insured contractor has costs that an unlicensed person may try to dodge. That can include permit fees, code compliance, legitimate subcontractors, insurance coverage, inspections, and proper project oversight. Those are not unnecessary extras. That is part of doing the work legally and responsibly.

So when someone gives you a price that seems dramatically lower, the real question is not whether you found a bargain. The real question is what they are leaving out.
Too often, the answer is no license, no permit, no insurance, no inspection, no written contract, and no meaningful responsibility when things go wrong.
That is not savings. That is risk.
Licensing Exists for a Reason

A contractor’s license is not just a card in a wallet or a number on a truck.
It is one of the basic protections a homeowner has. In Florida, licensed contractors operate within a regulated system and must meet state requirements for the work they are legally allowed to perform. That matters because construction is not guesswork. Homes involve structural systems, life safety, weather protection, electrical systems, plumbing systems, mechanical systems, and code requirements that affect both safety and value.
When someone is willing to perform licensed, permit-related work without the proper credentials, they are telling you something right from the start. They are willing to work outside the rules that legitimate contractors are expected to follow.
That should concern every homeowner.
Insurance Is Not a Side Issue

This is where a lot of people get caught off guard.
If somebody is injured on your property and the contractor is not properly insured, the homeowner can end up exposed to claims and losses they never expected. Florida’s owner-builder disclosure warns that unlicensed persons often try to get owners to pull permits and that the owner may be liable for injuries and financial losses tied to that work. It also warns that homeowner’s insurance may not cover those losses.
That is not some fine-print technicality.
That is serious exposure.

Permits and Inspections Protect the Homeowner
There is a reason unlicensed contractors often try to downplay permits.
They will say permits are not needed. They will say inspections only slow things down. They will say they can save you money by keeping the county out of it.
That is exactly the kind of talk homeowners need to be careful with.
Permits and inspections are part of the process that helps verify the work is being done to minimum code standards. Sarasota County makes clear that permits may be required before construction or repair begins, and the county actively enforces work performed without permits.
When work that requires a permit is done without one, the homeowner can end up facing code violations, stop-work orders, fines, hidden defects, insurance issues, resale complications, and expensive corrective work.

The shortcut is usually not a shortcut at all.
Unlicensed Contracting Is Illegal
This is not just a matter of preference or style.
In Florida, unlicensed contracting is illegal. State law provides criminal penalties for unlicensed contracting, including more serious consequences for repeat offenses.
That alone should make homeowners stop and think.
When someone is offering to perform licensed work without the proper license, they are not just doing business differently. They are operating outside the law.

The Owner-Builder Trap
One of the oldest moves in the book is when an unlicensed person tells the homeowner to pull the permit in the homeowner’s own name.
That should set off alarms.
Why? Because it can shift responsibility away from the person doing the work and onto the property owner. Florida’s owner-builder disclosure warns directly that this is a frequent practice used by unlicensed persons.

When a homeowner is told, “Just pull the permit yourself and I’ll take care of the rest,” that is usually not a favor. That is a transfer of risk.
This Is a Real Issue in Sarasota County
This is not an abstract problem that only happens somewhere else.
The Sarasota newspaper article you provided describes county efforts to crack down on unlicensed work and construction without permits, along with warning signs homeowners should watch for.

That lines up with what local governments continue to emphasize today: work without the proper license and permit process creates real problems for homeowners and for future buyers.

Final Thoughts
The bitterness of bad work lasts a whole lot longer than the temporary excitement of a cheap price.

Hiring an unlicensed contractor can cost a homeowner money, time, peace of mind, legal protection, insurance protection, and confidence in the work done on the home. At Rampart Homes, we believe construction should be handled the right way — with the proper license, the proper insurance, the proper permits, and the proper respect for the homeowner and the home.
That is not overkill.
That is how it should be.

Call to Action

Before you hire anyone to work on your home, verify the license. Ask for proof of insurance. Confirm who is pulling the permit. Get the scope in writing. Make sure the job is being handled legally and professionally from the beginning.
If you are planning a remodeling project, structural alteration, addition, or other permit-related work in Sarasota or Manatee County, contact Rampart Homes to discuss your project the right way from the start.

Do not gamble with your home.

Hire licensed professionals.
Protect your property, your investment, and your peace of mind.
Rampart Homes, Inc.
4401 Ashton Road, Suite E
Sarasota, FL 34233
941-925-4835
[email protected]

© 2026 Rampart Homes, Inc. All rights reserved.
This article is provided for general informational purposes and reflects the experience and professional perspective of Rampart Homes, Inc.

04/14/2026

Sarasota County FEMA 50% Rule in 2025–2026: What Homeowners Need to Know Before a Remodel Becomes a Flood-Compliance Project

If you own a home in Sarasota County and are planning a major remodel, addition, repair, or storm restoration, one regulation can dramatically change the scope, cost, and design of your project: the FEMA 50% Rule for substantial improvement or substantial damage under Sarasota County floodplain regulations.

Many homeowners begin with plans for a straightforward renovation only to discover that Sarasota County applies stricter standards once the threshold is crossed. The project may then require updated elevation, flood-resistant construction, and other compliance measures that add significant expense and time.

At Rampart Homes, we help clients understand Sarasota County’s substantial improvement rules early so they can make informed decisions and avoid costly surprises.
What Is Sarasota County Form IPS 43?

Form IPS 43 (revised April 1, 2025) is the official seven-page package used by Sarasota County Planning and Development Services to evaluate substantial improvement and substantial damage on existing buildings in Sarasota County flood hazard areas. It includes the notice, worksheet, detailed cost itemization requirements, and affidavits.

If the project meets the threshold, Sarasota County requires the structure to comply with current floodplain regulations — the same standards that apply to new construction.
The Sarasota County FEMA 50% Rule Explained
The calculation is straightforward:
Cost of Improvement or Repair ÷ Market Value of the Building (excluding land) ≥ 50%

If the ratio reaches 50% or more, the project qualifies as a substantial improvement (or substantial damage in repair cases) under Sarasota County rules.
The entire building must then be brought into compliance with today’s flood standards, which often includes elevating the lowest floor, protecting utilities, and using flood-resistant materials.

Substantial improvement in Sarasota County covers any combination of repair, reconstruction, rehabilitation, alteration, addition, or other work where the cumulative cost equals or exceeds 50% of the building’s pre-project market value (excluding land).
Comparing Sarasota County Flood Zones

Sarasota County flood zones determine your risk level, whether flood insurance is mandatory, how strict building requirements are during substantial improvement, and how much your Sarasota County flood insurance will cost. Flood risk exists countywide — not just on the coast — due to storm surge, heavy rainfall, and drainage limitations. Current effective Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) went into effect on March 27, 2024.
Here’s a clear comparison of the most common Sarasota County flood zones:

Zone VE (Coastal High-Hazard Area)
Highest-risk coastal zones with additional wave action (velocity) from storm surge.
Risk: 1% annual chance of flooding plus breaking waves ≥ 3 feet.
Insurance: Mandatory with federally backed mortgages; typically the most expensive Sarasota County flood insurance premiums.

Substantial Improvement Impact: Strictest rules — homes often must be elevated on pilings or open foundations with breakaway walls below the Design Flood Elevation. No enclosed areas below the elevation allowed in most cases.

Freeboard: Must meet BFE + 1 ft minimum (and voluntary options up to +4 ft total).
Typical Insurance Cost (illustrative, NFIP under Risk Rating 2.0): $5,000–$15,000+ annually, depending on elevation and specifics.

Zone AE (High-Risk Area)
Most common high-risk zone in Sarasota County (inland and some coastal areas). 1% annual chance of flooding with Base Flood Elevation (BFE) determined by detailed study.
Risk: Still considered the “100-year floodplain,” but without the extreme wave action of VE zones.
Insurance: Mandatory with federally backed mortgages.
Substantial Improvement Impact: Requires elevation of the lowest floor to the Design Flood Elevation (DFE), flood vents or breakaway walls where applicable, and flood-resistant materials.

More flexible than VE but still significant.
Freeboard: BFE + 1 ft minimum required; voluntary enhanced freeboard available.
Typical Insurance Cost: $2,000–$6,000+ annually (can vary widely by elevation).

Zone X (Minimal to Moderate Risk)
Areas outside the 100-year floodplain. Includes unshaded X (minimal risk, below 0.2% annual chance) and shaded X (moderate risk, 0.2%–1% chance or protected by levees).
Risk: Lowest mapped risk, though flooding from heavy rain or drainage issues can still occur.
Insurance: Not required by lenders, but strongly recommended — especially in Sarasota County’s flat terrain.

Substantial Improvement Impact: Usually does not trigger full floodplain compliance unless the County’s community flood studies or updated mapping places it in a higher-risk category during review.
Freeboard: Generally not required, but voluntary elevation can still lower Sarasota County flood insurance costs.
Typical Insurance Cost: $400–$1,200 annually (often much lower than AE or VE).

Key Takeaway: Even properties that feel “inland” or were previously in Zone X can shift into AE or face scrutiny under current Sarasota County maps. Always verify your exact zone and BFE with Sarasota County’s interactive flood maps before starting design work.
The 30% Warning Threshold
Don’t wait until you hit 50%. Sarasota County’s worksheet requires detailed cost itemization and extra documentation once your project reaches 30% of the building’s value. Treat this as an early signal to consult experts.

What Counts Toward the Cost?
The County requires a realistic estimate that includes labor and materials at market rates, overhead and profit for contractors, demolition, structural work, foundations, roofing, electrical, plumbing, mechanical systems, finishes, and more. Owner or volunteer labor must still be valued at market rates.

Why Building-Only Value Matters Most
The calculation uses the market value of the building only (not the total property value that includes land). High land values in Sarasota County often make the 50% threshold easier to reach than expected. Use a building-only appraisal or the adjusted assessed building value from the Property Appraiser.

Understanding Freeboard Requirements in Sarasota County
Freeboard is the additional safety height added above the Base Flood Elevation (BFE). It becomes part of the Design Flood Elevation (DFE) your building must meet. Sarasota County enforces three distinct levels:

FEMA Federal Minimum (0 feet freeboard)
The NFIP baseline — elevation to BFE only. Sarasota County does not allow this for new construction or substantial improvements.
Florida Building Code / Sarasota County Required Minimum (1 foot freeboard)
Mandatory for all occupiable buildings in Special Flood Hazard Areas (AE and VE zones). The DFE is at least BFE + 1 ft. This applies during substantial improvement reviews and affects both coastal and inland high-risk zones in Sarasota County.
Voluntary Enhanced Freeboard (up to 4 feet total above BFE)
Sarasota County allows an additional 3 feet of voluntary freeboard above the state minimum (BFE + 1 ft required + 3 ft voluntary = up to BFE + 4 ft). This option is available countywide in A and V zones for single-family, multi-family, and commercial structures. It includes adjusted height measurements so extra elevation does not penalize building height limits.
Zone Impact: Especially valuable in VE and AE zones, where it provides greater protection against waves and surge while dramatically lowering Sarasota County flood insurance premiums.

Choosing voluntary enhanced freeboard during a substantial improvement project can future-proof your home, reduce long-term costs, and increase resale value.
How Freeboard and Flood Zones Affect Sarasota County Flood Insurance Costs
Under FEMA’s Risk Rating 2.0, premiums are based on your specific property’s risk factors — including flood zone, distance to water, and lowest-floor elevation relative to BFE. Sarasota County (and cities like Sarasota and Venice) participate in the Community Rating System (CRS), currently providing up to a 25% discount on NFIP premiums for eligible policies.
Illustrative Annual NFIP Premium Examples (single-family home, approximate ranges as of 2025–2026):

Zone VE: $5,000–$15,000+ (highest due to wave action)
Zone AE: $2,000–$6,000+ (varies widely by elevation)
Zone X: $400–$1,200 (much lower, often optional)

Higher freeboard delivers the biggest savings:

At required minimum (BFE + 1 ft): Often 40–50%+ reduction vs. BFE only.
With voluntary enhanced freeboard (BFE + 2–4 ft): Additional 30–60% savings possible, sometimes thousands per year.

Over 30 years, the upfront cost of extra elevation is frequently offset many times over by lower Sarasota County flood insurance premiums — plus better peace of mind.
How to Navigate Sarasota County’s Substantial Improvement Requirements
Follow these steps early to keep your project on track in Sarasota County:

Verify your current flood zone and elevations using Sarasota County’s latest flood maps and resources.
Determine the building-only market value accurately (via appraisal or adjusted tax assessment).
Develop a realistic, fully itemized cost estimate including all construction categories, overhead, and profit.
Compare the numbers before finalizing designs. If you’re near 30%, seek guidance immediately. If approaching 50%, evaluate compliance options including freeboard choices and zone-specific requirements.
Decide on freeboard level early — required minimum (BFE + 1 ft) or voluntary enhanced (up to BFE + 4 ft) — especially important in AE and VE zones.
Partner with experienced professionals who understand FEMA rules, Sarasota County permitting, floodplain compliance, zone differences, and current freeboard options.

Protect Your Project and Your Investment
Flood risk in Sarasota County extends well beyond the coastline. Updated maps and evolving requirements mean that even previously compliant homes can face new standards once substantial improvement is triggered.
At Rampart Homes, we specialize in code-compliant remodeling and construction throughout Sarasota County. Our team evaluates your specific flood zone, Sarasota County freeboard options, and compliance path from the beginning, helping you align your project with your budget, timeline, and long-term goals.

Contact Rampart Homes Today
Don’t let Sarasota County floodplain rules, flood zone differences, or freeboard decisions derail your remodel. Reach out early for a clear, realistic assessment.

Rampart Homes, Inc.
4401 Ashton Road, Suite E
Sarasota, FL 34233
Phone: 941-925-4835
Email: [email protected]

Call or email us before you invest heavily in plans.
A proactive review with the right team can save you significant time, money, redesign, and frustration.
Rampart Homes — Building with clarity, compliance, and confidence in Sarasota County.
© 2026 Rampart Homes, Inc. All rights reserved.

Address

4401 Ashton Road, Ste E
Sarasota, FL
34233

Opening Hours

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

Telephone

+19419254835

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Rampart Homes, Inc. Remodeling and Additions in Sarasota for 32 years posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Rampart Homes, Inc. Remodeling and Additions in Sarasota for 32 years:

Share