One contractor, a network of trades.
Most general contractors are essentially scheduling companies. We're more honest about that — and built the model intentionally around it.
A note on how we operate.
Coker Construction Partners operates dedicated city-specific sites across the West Valley — Goodyear, Waddell, Peoria, Glendale, Buckeye, Litchfield Park, Avondale, and Surprise. The general contractor on every project is Coker Construction, an AZ ROC-licensed builder. Same license, same trade network, same standard of work across every city.
The model.
A real remodel needs a framer, an electrician, a plumber, a tile setter, a painter, an HVAC tech, often a stucco crew, sometimes a glazier. Almost no contractor keeps all of those people on payroll. The ones that say they do are either inflating their org chart or counting Joe-from-down-the-block as "in-house."
Coker is built around the truth of how a remodel actually gets staffed: a general contractor who owns the project — the design intent, the schedule, the permits, the inspections, the punch list, and the result — paired with a vetted network of trade subcontractors who each carry their own ROC license and insurance.
The work is only as good as the trades you put on it. Our job is to find the right ones and run the schedule so they actually show up. Coker Construction · Peoria, AZ
What "vetted and insured" actually means here.
Licensed under their own ROC
Every trade we bring onto a Peoria job holds an active Arizona Registrar of Contractors license in their specialty. Electrical sub holds the electrical license. Plumbing sub holds the plumbing license. We verify before we hire them and again at the start of every job.
General liability + workers' comp
No sub goes on a Coker job without active general liability coverage and workers' comp on file. We get COIs every year, and we won't move past contract signing without them.
Track record before scale
We don't add a new trade to the network for a single job. Every sub goes through a smaller test project first — fixed scope, watched closely — before they're in rotation for full remodels. Reliability under pressure is the bar.
One point of contact
You don't manage the trades — we do. One contract, one schedule, one phone number. If something needs to be sorted out between the electrician and the framer, that's our problem to solve.
We build here because we work here.
Peoria is one of the only cities in the West Valley that asks a contractor to be fluent across multiple eras of housing stock simultaneously. The bungalow on Madison Street near Old Town has different bones than the 1980s tract home in Westbrook Village, which has nothing in common with the Vistancia spec home built last year. The trades, the materials, the permits — even the conversation with the homeowner — all shift.
We've worked Peoria long enough to know how the City of Peoria permit office sequences inspections, which HOAs in Vistancia and Westbrook want what kind of ARC submission, and which trade partners we want on a 1980s panel upgrade versus a new-construction finish. That local fluency is half the value of hiring a contractor who actually builds in the West Valley.