About NVN Construction LLC - Licensed General Contractor, Broward County
CGC1539896 - NVN Construction's Licensed General Contractor Credential for Broward County
Verify active license status, license type, and DBPR record at verify active license status at myfloridalicense.com before calling.
- NVN Construction LLC, Serving Broward County, FL
- CGC1539896 - This Is NVN Construction's Florida Contractor License Number
What NVN Construction Does, Where It Operates, and What License It Holds
NVN Construction LLC is a licensed general contractor serving Broward County, Florida. The company holds Florida CGC license #CGC1539896, issued by the DBPR — the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, the state agency that issues and regulates contractor licenses. Learn more about what CGC license #CGC1539896 means for your project.
NVN performs kitchen remodels, bathroom remodels, whole-home renovations, roofing, attic insulation, impact windows and doors, outdoor construction, and landscaping. Every project is scoped, permitted, and managed under that single CGC credential. You can browse completed projects in Broward County to see the full scope of services performed.
NVN Construction is based in South Florida. All work is performed directly in Broward County.
The business is in its first year of operation. That means a focused service area, a specific license class, and a defined scope of work — not a diluted operation stretched across a dozen counties.
Why We Work in Broward County Specifically and What the Local Building Authority Requires
Broward County Building Services applies both Florida state code and its own local amendments. That distinction matters. Broward’s local amendments address South Florida’s wind exposure, flood zone classifications, and the High-Velocity Hurricane Zone — a designation that affects product approval requirements for roofing and impact windows.
Here’s what matters about Broward’s 31 municipalities: plan review isn’t uniform across all of them. A project in Coral Springs routes differently than one in Hollywood or Miramar, even though both fall under the same county building code framework. Knowing which municipal building department handles plan review — and what each one requires in the submittal package — comes from working in the county directly. See the full Broward County permit process for home renovations for a detailed breakdown of what each submittal requires.
NVN’s CGC license is registered with the DBPR and operates under Broward County’s local building authority jurisdiction. Permit submissions go through Broward County Building Services directly.
What It Looks Like When Every Service Is Evaluated as Part of One Energy Upgrade - Not Sold Separately
NVN Construction was built around one positioning decision: every project is scoped as an energy efficiency improvement. Read more about why NVN focuses on energy-efficient homes. Energy-efficient construction — a building approach that selects materials and systems specifically to reduce a home’s energy consumption — shapes how scope is written before a permit is filed.
In practice, that means this: a homeowner calling about a roof replacement also gets an attic insulation review. A homeowner replacing windows gets a solar heat gain coefficient discussion — SHGC is the rating that measures how much solar heat a window allows into a home, and in South Florida’s Climate Zone 1, it directly affects cooling load. Those conversations happen before scope is written because they belong there.
The building envelope — the physical barrier between a home’s interior and the outside environment, including the roof, walls, windows, and doors — is evaluated as a system, much like how building envelope insulation reduces energy consumption when treated holistically rather than in isolation. Not three separate jobs sold on three separate timelines.
This approach carries a practical benefit under Broward County’s permit structure. When insulation, roofing, and impact windows are scoped together under one CGC’s license, a single permit can cover the full scope. One permit application. One plan review cycle. One inspection sequence. That consolidation reduces permit fees, contractor mobilizations, and the total time the property is under active construction. See how NVN manages projects from permits to timeline for a full walkthrough of how that process works in practice.
The services connect. The scope reflects that.
Verify CGC1539896 at myfloridalicense.com Right Now - No Phone Call Required First
Every Florida contractor license is searchable in real time at myfloridalicense.com. The DBPR – Florida’s Department of Business and Professional Regulation – maintains a public license lookup database. Enter CGC1539896 in the search field. The result confirms active license status, the license type, the license holder’s name, and any disciplinary history on record.
Active license status means the CGC credential is currently valid – not expired, not suspended, not revoked. Under Florida Statute 489, CGC licenses must be renewed every two years. Renewal requires continuing education. A lapsed license means the contractor cannot legally pull a permit. An active status confirms they can.
CGC – Certified General Contractor – is the Florida license class that authorizes management of residential and commercial construction projects of any size. It includes the authority to pull permits and hire subcontractors. NVN Construction holds this credential. The active status is public. The database is there to use.
What a Florida CGC License Authorizes NVN to Do on a Broward County Project
A Florida Certified General Contractor license is the broadest residential construction license class available under state law. It differs from a single-trade contractor – a plumber, electrician, or roofer – who holds a license limited to one type of work. A CGC covers multiple trades and can manage entire projects under one permit.
The CGC designation also differs from a Registered license. A Registered contractor license is tied to a single Florida county. NVN’s CGC is a Certified license – meaning it carries statewide permit authority. NVN can submit permits directly to Broward County Building Services without an additional county-level registration requirement.
What that means for a Broward homeowner: the contractor you hire is the contractor of record on every permit. The same license holder who reviews your property files the permit application. There’s no permit agent, no subcontracted license holder, no administrative layer between the field work and the permit record.
CGC1539896 authorizes NVN to scope and permit kitchen remodels, bathroom remodels, whole-home renovations, roofing replacements, attic insulation installs, impact window and door replacements, outdoor construction, and landscaping – as standalone scopes or coordinated multi-trade projects under one permit submission.
How the Energy-Efficient Focus Shapes Every Scope NVN Writes for a Broward Homeowner
South Florida’s Climate Zone 1 designation sets stricter residential energy performance requirements than any other region in Florida. That’s the Florida Energy Code’s own classification. Broward County homes built before the current code version may fall short of today’s standards on insulation, windows, and roofing simultaneously.
Three components drive most of the energy loss in a typical Broward home. The attic, where R-value – the measure of insulation’s resistance to heat flow – determines how much heat radiates from the roof deck into the living space below. The roof system, where underlayment condition and solar reflectance ratings affect how much heat the structure absorbs on a 95-degree afternoon. And the windows, where SHGC and design pressure ratings determine both energy performance and storm protection.
Each component is evaluated during the initial assessment. A homeowner who replaces their roof without addressing a degraded R-value in the attic has addressed part of the system. FPL rebate stacking – qualifying for multiple Florida Power & Light rebate programs simultaneously by completing more than one qualifying upgrade in the same project – is only possible when all qualifying components are documented under one contractor’s project record.
The energy-efficient focus isn’t a separate offering. It’s the framework the construction work is organized around.
Broward County Communities Where NVN Construction Operates
NVN Construction serves homeowners across Broward County, Florida. The service area covers the county’s full range of municipalities – from Coral Springs and Coconut Creek in the north, through Plantation, Davie, and Weston in the central corridor, to Hollywood, Hallandale Beach, and Pembroke Pines in the south. Broward’s coastal communities – Pompano Beach, Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, Deerfield Beach – fall within the service area as well, where coastal wind exposure affects product selection for roofing and impact window projects. All permit submissions are filed through Broward County Building Services, or through the relevant municipal building department where applicable.
Start with the Free Assessment - the Same CGC Who Reviews Your Home Files the Permit
The free on-site assessment is conducted by the CGC license holder – the same person who submits the permit. What you learn during the assessment directly shapes what gets filed with Broward County Building Services.
Verify CGC1539896 at myfloridalicense.com first if you’d like. Then call NVN Construction at 754-337-0575 to schedule your assessment.
Does NVN Construction carry general liability insurance?
Yes, Florida CGC license holders are required to maintain general liability insurance as a condition of licensure under Florida Statute 489. NVN Construction holds license #CGC1539896, and the DBPR record at myfloridalicense.com will show the insurance and bonding status attached to that credential. In South Florida, where storm-related property damage claims are common, confirming active coverage before any contractor sets foot on your property is a standard step worth taking.
How long does the free on-site assessment actually take?
Most assessments run 45 to 90 minutes depending on project scope and property size. NVN Construction’s licensed contractor reviews permit history, existing conditions, and applicable Broward County code requirements during a single visit – not a walk-through followed by a callback. You receive a written summary of findings before any scope or cost discussion begins.
Does NVN use subcontractors, or does one crew handle all the work?
NVN Construction operates with a single primary crew under CGC license #CGC1539896, but a CGC license legally authorizes the contractor to hire licensed subcontractors for specific trade scopes when a project requires it. The CGC remains the contractor of record on every permit, which means accountability for code compliance stays with NVN regardless of who performs individual tasks. Single-trade contractors cannot manage multi-trade scopes this way.
What do Broward County building permits typically cost for a remodel?
Broward County permit fees are calculated as a percentage of the project’s declared valuation – typically ranging from 1.5% to 3% of total project cost, plus plan review and inspection fees. A $30,000 kitchen remodel may carry $600 to $1,200 in permit fees before inspection charges are added. The exact fee is calculated at time of permit application submission, not before. NVN provides a permit cost estimate as part of the written assessment summary.
Is NVN a good fit if my project is less than a year old as a company - does that create risk for me?
The legal protection on a licensed construction project comes from the CGC credential, not the company’s age. NVN Construction holds active Florida CGC license #CGC1539896, which means all permitted work is subject to Broward County inspection and code enforcement regardless of how long the company has been operating. Florida’s contractor licensing system exists specifically so that license standing – not reputation alone – determines a homeowner’s recourse if work fails inspection.
Can NVN Construction work on condos or townhouses in Broward County?
A Florida CGC license authorizes work on both single-family homes and multi-unit residential buildings, including condos and townhouses. However, condo projects in Broward County introduce additional approval layers – HOA board approval, condo association building rules, and in some cases a master association review – before a permit can be filed. NVN evaluates those requirements during the assessment so that HOA restrictions are identified before scope is written, not after a permit is submitted.
Does NVN handle architectural drawings, or do I need to hire a separate designer before getting a permit?
Some Broward County permit submissions require engineered drawings or architectural plans – kitchen remodels involving structural changes, room additions, and most roofing replacements fall into this category. NVN Construction coordinates plan production as part of the permit submission process; the homeowner does not need to hire a separate designer independently before calling. What is needed and who produces it is identified during the free on-site assessment.
What if my HOA has restrictions that conflict with what Broward County allows?
HOA rules and building code operate as two separate approval systems – passing one does not satisfy the other. In Broward County, a homeowner can receive a valid building permit for impact windows and still face an HOA rejection based on frame color or glass tint. NVN Construction reviews HOA envelope guidelines during the assessment phase so that material selections meet both sets of requirements before any permit application is filed.
How far in advance should I schedule NVN for a pre-hurricane season project?
Schedule by February if the project needs to be inspected and closed before June 1. Roofing and impact window permits in Broward County require plan review, which typically adds two to four weeks before an inspection can be scheduled. April and May bookings compete with the full pre-season contractor surge across South Florida. First-quarter scheduling is the only reliable way to complete permitted work before the Atlantic hurricane season opens.