Kitchen Remodeling Wayne PA

Wayne kitchens skew older and higher-finish than most of what we work on. Most of Wayne is in Radnor Township, with the bulk of residential housing dating from 1900 through 1940 — stone colonials, traditional center-hall homes, and the occasional restored 1860s farmhouse. The kitchen work is closer in scope and complexity to what we run in Bryn Mawr than what we run in Exton: butler’s pantry conversions, infrastructure replacement, inset cabinetry, paneled appliances. We’ve been doing it since 1989.

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Remodeling Your Wayne Kitchen — What to Expect

Since 1989, Fedor has rebuilt kitchens across Wayne, Radnor Township, and the Main Line — opening them up, replacing a century of original electrical and plumbing, and matching the finish level these homes call for, all on a fixed-price contract with a single point of contact who answers your calls.

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2026 Southeastern PA Kitchen Cost Guide

A complete 2026 kitchen cost reference for Chester County, Delaware County, and the Main Line — every tier, from a $30K refresh to a $150K+ custom build.

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See what every kitchen tier actually costs in our service area — with line-item breakdowns from completed Fedor projects in West Chester, Exton, Wayne, and Malvern.

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What a 1900s Wayne stone colonial kitchen actually involves

Most Wayne kitchen work falls into three project profiles:

Pre-1930 stone colonials. The defining Wayne house — concentrated in the blocks near the train station and along the Conestoga Road corridor. Common scope:

  • Open the wall to the original butler’s pantry — almost universal on these projects
  • Replace original electrical service — many Wayne stone colonials still run on 1970s 100-amp panels that need to come out for a modern kitchen
  • Replace galvanized plumbing with copper in the kitchen and along exterior walls
  • Install inset cabinetry in painted or stained finish, often with paneled appliances
  • Address the radiator system — most pre-1930 Wayne homes were built for hot-water radiators; relocating one for cabinet placement requires a plumber familiar with the system

1920s–1960s traditional center-hall homes. Filling in between the larger stone colonials. More modest scope with similar finish-level expectations:

  • Open the wall to the dining or breakfast room
  • Cabinet replacement to the ceiling at high finish levels
  • Modern lighting and appliances
  • Service upgrades if still on a 1960s panel

Mid-century moderns and post-2000 contemporary rebuilds. Smaller share, often refresh-tier scope.

What’s distinctive about Wayne: clients often work with architects and interior designers from the start. We function smoothly as the build half of design-build collaborations on Wayne projects.

Wayne kitchen costs — why Radnor Township projects skew higher

Wayne stone colonial kitchens almost always run in Tiers 3 and 4. Refresh-tier projects are rare.

TierRangeTypical Wayne project
Cosmetic Refresh$30,000 – $45,000Rare — only on post-2000 contemporary rebuilds
Pull-and-Replace$40,000 – $75,000+Possible on smaller mid-century homes
Full Remodel$65,000 – $120,000+Standard stone colonial scope including infrastructure
Custom Kitchen Build$100,000 – $150,000+Down-to-studs on a larger Wayne stone colonial

Wayne stone colonial kitchens typically land in the upper end of the published ranges because of the structural and infrastructure work plus higher finish-level expectations. The Custom Build tier doesn’t carry a hard ceiling — full custom projects with paneled appliances, inset cabinetry, structural work, and premium materials regularly exceed $150K. Appliances are not included in these ranges unless noted in your project scope.

Our Design-Build Process

Most remodels go sideways for the same reason: design and construction don’t talk to each other. The designer draws something the builder can’t actually build for the price quoted, and you’re stuck in the middle.

We use a design-build model — the team that designs your Wayne kitchen is the team that builds it. Every line on the drawing has been priced. Every spec has been confirmed. By the time we hand you a contract, the number is real, the timeline is real, and we’ve already solved the problems other remodelers won’t discover until they open a pre-1930 wall — the knob-and-tube, the undersized panel, the galvanized supply, the framing that isn’t where the drawings assume. We sequence the work around Radnor Township’s inspection schedule so the project doesn’t stall waiting on the township, and we collaborate cleanly with your architect or designer if you have one.

The 8 steps, start to finish

  1. First Call — a 10–15 minute conversation to understand what you’re planning and whether it makes sense to meet.
  2. In-Home Consultation — we walk your space, listen, and learn what matters most in the finished result.
  3. Design Call + Initial Estimate — an initial design concept and a real budget range, walked through together.
  4. Selections & Design Refinement — cabinetry, countertops, tile, fixtures, hardware, lighting, paint — every choice made before we build.
  5. Fixed-Price Proposal + Contract — every line priced and confirmed buildable. The number is real before you sign.
  6. Pre-Construction — permits, ordering, scheduling, and material staging so the job runs without gaps.
  7. Construction — carpenter-led crews, a single point of contact, weekly updates, no surprise upcharges.
  8. Final Walkthrough + Warranty — we close out every detail and back the work with a 1-year workmanship warranty.

Radnor Township permitting for Wayne kitchen projects

We handle permitting for your project through Radnor Township. Permit fees tend to run 1–2% of contract value and are included transparently on every Fedor proposal.

Where we source for high-finish Wayne kitchens

Recent Work

Recent Wayne Projects

Marble-topped island kitchen with white inset cabinetry and exposed beam in Wayne, PA — kitchen remodel by Fedor Fabrication

Marble Island Kitchen

Full layout reconfiguration with a marble-topped island.

Frameless walk-in tile shower in an expanded primary bathroom in Wayne, PA — bathroom remodel by Fedor Fabrication

Primary Bath & Walk-In Shower

Primary bath expansion with a frameless walk-in tile shower.

Large-format porcelain master bathroom with marble soaking tub in Wayne, PA — bathroom remodel by Fedor Fabrication

Porcelain Master Bathroom

Large-format porcelain master bath remodel.

What Wayne Homeowners Say About Working With Us

★★★★★ 4.8 / 5

186+ verified reviews across Google and Angi

Reading reviews is the single best way to know what working with a contractor is actually like. We’d rather you read what our Main Line clients say in their own words than read marketing copy from us.

Everything from first meeting to final completion was a pleasure to work with the sales, craftsmen and ownership of Fedor. Everyone involved was committed to a quality design and installation of our new kitchen. We highly recommend Fedor Fabrication for kitchen and bath renovation. We are very pleased with our new kitchen.

Marianne M. — verified Google review

by far the best around ! kitchen and bathrooms in 2 homes that are outstanding …no need to interview other contractors !

Jack K. — verified Google review

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a kitchen remodel cost in Wayne?

Wayne kitchen remodels run $40,000 to $150,000+, and most land in the upper tiers. A pull-and-replace on a smaller mid-century home runs $40K–$75K; a full stone colonial remodel including infrastructure work runs $65K–$120K+; a down-to-studs custom build on a larger Wayne colonial runs $100K–$150K+, and fully custom projects with paneled appliances and inset cabinetry go beyond that. Wayne skews high because pre-1930 stone colonials need electrical service replacement, replumbing, and structural work newer homes don’t. Appliances aren’t included unless noted in scope. The free cost guide above breaks every tier down.

How long does a Wayne stone colonial kitchen remodel take?

Most Wayne kitchen remodels run 6–8 weeks of active construction once cabinetry and materials are on site. The full timeline from first call to final walkthrough is typically 3–5 months, because a pre-1930 stone colonial adds steps a newer home doesn’t — opening to the butler’s pantry, electrical service replacement, replumbing, and Radnor Township inspections between phases. We give you a hard date at proposal and update it weekly in the JobTread portal so you always know where the project stands.

What’s included in your fixed-price quote?

Everything we can see at signing: design, all materials (cabinetry, countertops, tile, fixtures, hardware), all labor and trade partners (electrical through S.B. Electric, plumbing through AA to Z, tile, finish carpentry), permits, inspections, dumpster, project management, and the final walkthrough. The known old-house work — panel replacement, galvanized-to-copper replumb, structural work to open a wall — is priced in, not left as an allowance that balloons later. Appliances are included only if noted in your scope. The only thing that changes the number is scope you add after signing, documented and approved by you in writing first.

What happens when you open a wall in a 1900s Wayne home?

In a pre-1930 Wayne stone colonial we almost always find something behind the plaster — knob-and-tube wiring, an undersized 1970s panel, galvanized supply lines, or framing that isn’t where the drawings assume. None of it surprises us; it’s why these projects take real expertise to run. We price what we can see directly on the proposal and flag what we can’t. If hidden conditions surface at demo, we document, photograph, price, and get your written approval before proceeding. No silent change orders.

Can I keep my existing kitchen layout?

Sometimes — but on a Wayne stone colonial it’s usually worth opening the wall to the original butler’s pantry or the dining room, which is the single most common change we make here. If the existing layout genuinely works and you just want new cabinetry, counters, and finishes, that’s a pull-and-replace — faster and less expensive. We give you an honest read on your specific kitchen; keeping a bad layout to save money is the change homeowners regret most within a year.

What if I want to remove a wall or add an island?

Common on Wayne projects. Many stone colonial kitchens were built closed-off, and opening to the butler’s pantry or dining room transforms how the house lives. If the wall is load-bearing — frequently the case in these homes — we bring in Rise Engineering for a stamped beam design, scoped and priced on the proposal, not improvised mid-project. A marble or stone island is one of the most-requested Wayne features; we account for the cabinet, electrical, and any plumbing runs it needs from the start.

What cabinetry and materials do you typically install in Wayne kitchens?

Wayne clients lean toward inset cabinetry in painted or stained finish, often with paneled appliances to keep the period look. We spec cabinetry through Shiloh and Great Northern, tile and stone through Devon Tile or The Tile Shop in King of Prussia, plumbing fixtures through Ferguson, and appliances through Gerhard’s in Ardmore. We don’t take supplier kickbacks — the recommendation is based on what holds up in a working kitchen, not on our margin.

Do you work with my architect or interior designer?

Yes — it’s common on Wayne projects, more so than anywhere else we work. Many Wayne homeowners engage an architect or interior designer from the start, and we function as the build half of a design-build collaboration. If you already have drawings, we review them, tell you what works and what won’t build for the price assumed, then build to spec. If you don’t, our in-house design-build covers it end to end.

My Wayne home has knob-and-tube wiring. Can you replace it?

Yes. The visible work — panel replacement, the wiring runs we can identify on the walk, the new circuits the kitchen needs — gets scoped and priced directly on the proposal. For hidden knob-and-tube buried inside walls or attic chases we can’t see until demolition, the proposal notes that hidden infrastructure may surface; if it does, we walk you through scope and cost before any change order. Many pre-1930 Wayne stone colonials still run on a 1970s 100-amp panel that has to come out for a modern kitchen anyway.

What does Radnor Township permitting cost for a Wayne kitchen project?

Permit fees through Radnor Township typically run 1–2% of contract value. On a $130,000 stone colonial kitchen, expect roughly $1,300–$2,600. We pull every required permit, schedule the inspections around the production schedule, and show the permit cost as a transparent line item on the proposal — it’s never buried in markup or sprung on you mid-project.

Do I need to hire my own designer?

No separate designer needed — we’re design-build, so the team that designs your Wayne kitchen is the team that builds it; nothing gets drawn that we can’t build for the price quoted (and we collaborate cleanly if you already have an architect).

How will you communicate with me during construction?

During construction you get one point of contact who answers calls and texts, weekly progress updates, and a heads-up before anything becomes a problem, plus the live JobTread portal showing schedule, budget, and invoices. On a 100-year-old house, that communication is the difference between a manageable project and a stressful one.

Can I see Wayne kitchen projects you’ve completed?

Yes — see our Wayne marble island kitchen remodel and the full project portfolio.

Do you also remodel bathrooms in Wayne?

Yes — Wayne bathroom remodeling — same fixed-price model, same Radnor Township permitting, same in-house crews.