
From Storefront To Sanctuary — On Time For Easter.
New worship spaces, fellowship halls, youth wings, and phased capital-campaign expansions for growing Upstate churches. Built with stewardship-conscious budgeting and grand-opening calendar discipline.
Faith Communities · Charlotte, NC
What this looks like in Charlotte
About Charlotte, NC. Charlotte is the largest city in the Carolinas and the second-largest banking center in the United States, with Bank of America and Truist headquartered in the urban core and a rapidly growing tech, energy, and logistics base layered around it. The metro covers a wide footprint from uptown high-rises to South End infill, the affluent Myers Park / Eastover corridor, and the suburban ring through Ballantyne and University City.
What it means for faith communities. Charlotte construction works under the City of Charlotte's Unified Development Ordinance, which substantially reshaped zoning, parking, and tree-save requirements in recent years and continues to drive how infill, mixed-use, and commercial projects are scoped. Mecklenburg County's stormwater rules — among the most rigorous in the Southeast — bind site planning on most non-trivial commercial and multifamily projects. For an Upstate-SC contractor with NASCLA reciprocity, the natural Charlotte work is QSR and restaurant rollouts along the suburban retail spine, hotel and select-service hospitality near uptown and the airport, office tenant build-outs, and multifamily clubhouse and amenity construction tied to apartment pipelines.
Who You Are
You're a pastor, elder, or building committee member at an Upstate church — Anderson, Easley, Pickens, Powdersville, or Greer. Congregation 200 to 1,500. Transitioning from a strip-mall lease to a permanent building, or expanding existing campus with a youth wing or fellowship hall. Budgets $1M to $8M. You need a builder who understands stewardship optics, capital campaign timing, and acoustic and AV requirements.
What You're Solving For
What Success Looks Like
Three outcomes that actually matter. Not features. Not corporate-speak.
Build something the congregation feels proud to invite people into
Sanctuary design that honors stewardship — beautiful without being extravagant. Materials and proportions chosen so the building serves worship, not the other way around.
Don't surprise the building committee with change orders
Pre-construction budget modeling, transparent procurement, and change-order discipline that committees can show donors with confidence. Documentation by default.
Open by Easter, Christmas, or program-year start
Calendar pressure is real for churches. We schedule around your dedication date and hold the milestone gates that make it real.
Services For You
How We Build For This.
Every BHR service applied specifically to your situation — not generic offerings rebadged.
Resources
Read Before You Build.
Specific guides for your situation — published on the BHR blog or on the way.
What a Church Building Committee Should Ask Every Commercial GC
Designing a Sanctuary for Acoustics, AV, and Everyday Worship in the Upstate
Phased Church Construction: Building in Capital-Campaign Stages Without Restarting Costs
From Storefront to Sanctuary: A Permitting and Site-Plan Roadmap for Upstate Churches
Why BHR For You
The Specific Reasons This Lands With You.
Veteran-founded, faith-friendly, locally rooted. NASCLA Unlimited GC plus SC Commercial #G126133 — credentials a building committee can verify in minutes.
Free building-committee workshop and pre-design feasibility document. Committees love documents they can show donors.
Let's Talk About Your Project
Free Consult.
Specifically For Faith Communities.
We come to you (or we meet at our 101 N Main office in downtown Greenville). Walk the situation, talk scope and budget tier honestly, and rough in next steps before any contract.
Faith Communities in nearby cities
Read more for faith communities
Other people we help
What success looks like in Charlotte
Same coverage in nearby cities