The construction world is changing fast. What used to be built entirely on-site is now often prefabricated and delivered with impressive speed and precision. But does that mean traditional construction is outdated? Not at all. At Grupo Contreras, we’ve worked with both approaches, and we’re here to help you understand when and why each makes sense.
Construction Site silhouettes
What Is Traditional Construction?
It’s the classic method: walls go up, finishes are installed, and everything happens directly at the jobsite. It offers flexibility and can adapt to last-minute changes or unique site conditions.
1. Pros:
● Highly adaptable to custom designs. ● Easier to adjust for unique terrain or client requests. ● On-the-spot changes are possible.
2. Cons:
● Longer timelines. ● More weather-related delays. ● Greater margin of error if supervision is weak.
What Is Industrialized Construction?
This is the modern take: using standardized elements, prefabricated off-site, and assembled efficiently. The goal is to reduce field labor and transfer much of the process to controlled environments.
1. Pros
● Faster completion. ● Better quality control. ● Less material waste.
2. Cons:
● Limited flexibility once production starts. ● Requires detailed upfront planning and logistics.
Which One Works Best and When?
Traditional construction still shines in custom homes, remodels, or remote sites. Industrialized methods are ideal for commercial developments, repetitive layouts, metal structures, and tight schedules.
Our Experience Blending Both
At Grupo Contreras, we operate as subcontractors for Drywall, Framing, ACT, and Cold Form Metal Framing—so we know when to apply traditional skills and when to embrace industrial precision. We’ve delivered fully customized builds and highly optimized prefab-based jobs. Either way, our goal is simple: get the job done right, safely, and on time. There’s no one-size-fits-all method. There’s only the best-fit method for your specific needs. As technical partners, we’ll help you find that fit. Because at Grupo Contreras, we build like yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
Architects, designers, and end clients all agree: in drywall, the finish is everything. And joint treatment is where it all starts. Poorly treated joints crack, show shadows, or become visible under lighting.
At Grupo Contreras, we know flawless finishes aren’t luck—they’re the result of solid technique, good materials, and strict execution....
Una de las mayores preocupaciones de cualquier arquitecto, diseñador o cliente final es la apariencia del acabado final. Y en sistemas de drywall, las juntas lo son todo. Si no están bien tratadas, las uniones entre placas se notan, se fisuran o proyectan sombras.
En Grupo Contreras entendemos que un buen acabado no es suerte, es técnica, y que...
Not all drywall is created equal. In commercial and institutional construction, some walls must withstand fire—literally. Fire-rated assemblies help contain flames. protect lives, and meet code.
At Grupo Contreras, we specialize in fire-rated drywall systems and know that improper installation can completely invalidate the protection expected....
En construcción comercial e institucional, no todo drywall es igual. Hay espacios que
requieren soluciones con resistencia al fuego para cumplir con códigos locales, proteger estructuras y salvar vidas.
En Grupo Contreras, dominamos la instalación de muros RF (resistentes al fuego) y sabemos que un error en su montaje puede invalidar toda la...
A well-built project starts long before materials hit the site. In commercial construction, technical documentation—submittals, shop drawings, and mockups—lays the foundation for successful execution.
Una obra bien ejecutada empieza mucho antes de que lleguen los materiales. En construcción comercial, los documentos técnicos como submittals, planos de taller (shop drawings) y mockups son fundamentales para evitar errores y garantizar la calidad final.