Studio · Spring volume · Curated remodel guide Material evidence before the first consult
Field note · C22 material library entry. 2026.07.05
Kitchen Remodeler

Integrity Kitchen and Bath of St. Louis Proposal Fit: How to Verify Scope, Materials, and Change Orders

Use this St. Louis kitchen remodel decision guide to evaluate Integrity Kitchen and Bath’s proposal—especially how scope is defined, materials are chosen, and change orders are handled before demolition.

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Nostalgia Decor & Bath Guide
Filed
2026.07.05
Updated
2026.07.06
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4 min read
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Kitchen Remodeler
Integrity Kitchen and Bath of St. Louis Proposal Fit: How to Verify Scope, Materials, and Change Orders Plate · C22
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Picking a kitchen remodeler is less about who has the nicest photos and more about whether the proposal is buildable. For homeowners comparing options in the St. Louis area, Integrity Kitchen and Bath of St. Louis is a familiar name to confirm directly—starting with the basics you can verify from its public contact details: 7300 Dorset Ave, St. Louis, MO 63130 (phone: +1 314-551-9303) and its official site at https://integritykitchenandbathstlouis.com/.

This article is designed to help you judge whether their process matches your project reality—timeline, selections, and the paperwork that protects you when scope shifts.

Start with the proposal “scope map,” not the bottom-line number

When you request a bid from Integrity Kitchen and Bath of St. Louis, ask for a written scope that breaks the project into real work packages. That usually means: design/layout decisions, cabinet and countertop planning, tile/backsplash scope, fixture placements, and the install sequence. If the proposal only lists broad categories (like “kitchen remodel” or “labor and materials”) without describing what’s included, you’ll struggle to compare bids fairly.

A practical test: can you point to the document and explain exactly what happens before demolition, what happens during install, and what remains for a final punch-list? If you can’t, ask them to rewrite the scope into phases.

Confirm which “decisions” are yours vs. theirs

Kitchen remodels fail most often on decision timing. Before you approve anything, clarify who is responsible for which calls—cabinet style and finish, countertop material and edge options, backsplash tile choice, and fixture/model selections. If they recommend styles (contemporary, industrial, mid-century, minimalist, etc.), ask for the proposal to specify the actual selections window: when you’ll decide, how many rounds you get, and what happens if selections change late in the schedule.

Material allowances and change orders: what protections are written down?

Even a well-planned remodel changes. The real question is how the contract handles that. Request written language (or at least a clear explanation) for two issues: allowances and change orders.

Allowance sanity check

For countertops, cabinets, and tile, ask whether the proposal lists specific brands/grades/models or uses allowances. If it uses allowances, request the coverage rules: what the allowance includes, what’s excluded, and how price differences are handled. Then ask them to show you a realistic “mid-range” and “high-range” example so your final total doesn’t surprise you.

Change order triggers

Ask what events typically trigger a change order—hidden conditions, design changes, schedule acceleration, or missing items discovered during demo. You want to know the approval workflow: who notifies you, how revisions are documented, and whether any work proceeds before you sign off.

Timeline dependencies: how they prevent delays between trades

A kitchen schedule is rarely “one job, one timeline.” It’s a chain: design and ordering, demolition readiness, countertop fabrication lead time, tile curing time, and installation sequencing. When you talk with Integrity Kitchen and Bath of St. Louis, ask how they structure the calendar around those dependencies.

What you should look for in a good plan: ordered materials milestones, estimated lead times (and what happens if lead times slip), and who coordinates trade handoffs. If the proposal doesn’t address these dependencies, that’s a red flag—especially if you’re trying to stay within a specific move-in date.

Neighborhood fit and logistics in St. Louis (what to ask before you sign)

Location matters for communication and on-site logistics. Since the business lists 7300 Dorset Ave in St. Louis, MO, confirm practical details that affect everyday disruption: parking/access expectations, daily work hours as they operate locally, and how they handle dust control and cleanup during demolition. Also ask how they stage materials so your kitchen stays usable longer—if that’s part of your plan.

Questions that keep the conversation concrete

Before signing, request clear answers to: “What’s included in demo and disposal?”, “Which items are allowances vs. fixed selections?”, “How are design changes priced and approved?”, and “What does your final walkthrough/punch-list process include?” If those answers sound vague, ask for written clarification.

Integrity Kitchen and Bath of St. Louis can be a solid option if their proposal makes scope, allowances, and change-order rules obvious in plain language. Use the checkpoints above to turn their bid into a buildable plan—so you can compare offers confidently and approve the work that matches your kitchen remodel goals.

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