We offer home renovation & general contracting services.

Home Remodeling in Sausalito, CA

Revitalize Your Marin County Home

Unleash your home’s potential with inspired home remodeling in Sausalito. We craft personalized renovations that revitalize and inspire.

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Your Remodeling Partner

  • Breathe new life into your home with imaginative designs.
  • Elevate your property’s allure, increasing its value.
  • Relish in bespoke living spaces that mirror your unique style.
  • Enjoy a home that’s as comfortable as it is energy-efficient.
  • Why Choose Creekside Pro Construction

    Locally Serving Marin County

    We are not just another home remodeling company in Sausalito. We’re storytellers, crafting spaces that reflect your unique narrative. Our artisans blend meticulous craftsmanship with innovative design, using durable materials like reclaimed wood and handcrafted tiles to build spaces that are as enduring as they are beautiful. We believe your home should be an expression of you, and we’re dedicated to making that vision a reality.

    Home Remodeling in CA

    Your CA Remodeling Journey

  • Dream and Discover: Share your aspirations and explore possibilities with our designers.
  • Craft and Create: Collaborate on a bespoke plan tailored to your lifestyle.
  • Build and Transform: Watch your dream home take shape with meticulous execution.
  • Ready to get started?

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    About Creekside Pro Construction

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    Home Remodeling Services

    Choose Creekside Pro Construction in Marin County

    Home remodeling is an art form – a careful dance between functionality and aesthetics. At Creekside Pro Construction, we’re masters of this craft, specializing in transformations that breathe new life into your home. Our deep-rooted connection to Sausalito, CA, means we understand the nuances of local architecture and style, ensuring your home is both beautiful and seamlessly integrated into its surroundings. To embark on your home remodeling adventure, contact us at 925-445-7684.

    Sausalito was once the site of a Coast Miwok settlement known as Liwanelowa. The branch of the Coast Miwok living in this area were known as the Huimen (or as Nación de Uimen to the Spanish). Early explorers of the area described them as friendly and hospitable. According to Juan de Ayala, “To all these advantages must be added the best of all, which is that the heathen Indians of the port are so faithful in their friendship and so docile in their disposition that I was greatly pleased to receive them on board.” European settlers took advantage of the Huimen’s kindness and hospitality, and completely massacred them within the span of a few generations. As historian Jack Tracy has observed, “Their dwellings on the site of Sausalito were explored and mapped in 1907, nearly a century and a half later, by an archaeological survey. By that time, nothing was left of the culture of those who had first enjoyed the natural treasures of the bay. The life of the Coastal Miwoks had been reduced to archaeological remnants, as though thousands of years had passed since their existence.”

    1781 Cañizares map of San Francisco Bay

    The first European known to visit the present-day location of Sausalito was Don José de Cañizares, on August 5, 1775. Cañizares was head of an advance party dispatched by longboat from the ship San Carlos, searching for a suitable anchorage for the larger vessel. The crew of the San Carlos came ashore soon after, reporting friendly natives and teeming populations of deer, elk, bear, sea lions, seals and otters. More significantly for maritime purposes, they reported an abundance of large, mature timber in the hills, a valuable commodity for shipwrights in need of raw materials for masts, braces and planking.

    Despite these and later positive reports, the Spanish colonial government of Upper California did little to establish a presence in the area. When a military garrison (now the Presidio of San Francisco) and a Franciscan mission (Mission Dolores) were founded the following year, they were situated on the opposite, southern shore of the bay, where no portage was necessary for overland traffic to and from Monterey, the regional capitol. As a result, the far shore of the Golden Gate strait would remain largely wilderness for another half-century.

    Learn more about Sausalito.