GroundworkEarth & Timber
Warm earth tones with the project gallery front and center, a five-step process timeline from estimate to handover, and a quote form. Generate from this one if you're a general contractor whose portfolio carries the pitch.
This is a website for your construction business — the one a homeowner checks before signing anything. Describe what you build and GetSite's AI generates the whole site — project gallery, services, quote form — free to build and preview, no credit card.
Two ways a contractor's site can lean. Pick the direction that fits your jobs, hit generate, and the AI builds the real site — gallery, quote form, and all.
Warm earth tones with the project gallery front and center, a five-step process timeline from estimate to handover, and a quote form. Generate from this one if you're a general contractor whose portfolio carries the pitch.
Bright white and wood with before-and-after comparisons, fixed-price packages with starting prices, and a consultation form. The natural starting point if you're a specialty remodeler selling certainty instead of open-ended jobs.
Homeowners can't read a spec sheet, but they can read a finished kitchen. Put your best jobs on a page that loads fast on a phone — because that's where you'll be compared with the other two bids. Photos of your actual work close jobs that a brochure paragraph never will.
The form asks what you'd ask on a first call: project type, budget range, timeline. People with a $5k budget for a $50k job filter themselves out, and what reaches your inbox is worth a site visit. Submissions land in your dashboard and your email.
Nobody hands a six-figure contract to a contractor they can't find online. When a homeowner googles you the night before signing, a real site — projects, license number, reviews — is what "checks out" looks like. It's doing that job while you're on site.
Six things homeowners check before they sign with a contractor. GetSite builds all of them in.
Real jobs, photographed by you, beat renders and stock every time — homeowners can tell. Show the mid-build stages, not just the glamour shot; the framing photo is what says you actually did it. Group by project so a visitor can picture their own addition.
"Call for a free estimate" gets you calls during a pour. A form that asks project type, budget range, and timeline gathers the same information while you work — and tells you which requests deserve the drive before you make it.
Every hire-a-contractor guide tells homeowners to verify these first, so answer before they ask. The actual license number on the page, not just the word "licensed." One line of text, and the biggest reason to keep shopping is gone.
Say what you build and what you don't. If you take additions but not decks, new construction but not insurance work, saying so kills the dead-end estimates early. It also tells Google precisely which searches you belong in.
Most contractor work arrives by referral — and the referral still checks you out online before calling. Quote real reviews beside the projects they describe, and link your Google profile for the rest. It's word of mouth, with receipts.
Homeowners fear the unknown more than the price. Walk them through it: estimate, contract, demo, inspections, punch list, handover — and how you handle change orders when they come up. The contractor who explains the process sounds like the one who follows one.
A few sentences: name, trade, service area, the kind of jobs you take. That's the whole brief — nothing to install, no templates to dig through.
Home, services, projects, contact — real pages, with copy and images already placed. You're editing a finished site instead of staring at an empty one.
Say "add the Fairview addition to the gallery" or "move the license number up" and the AI makes the change. When it's right, publish on your own domain — hosting and SSL included.
“Build a website for Caldera Construction, a licensed and insured general contractor in Bend, Oregon. We do additions, garage conversions, and full-home remodels — most jobs run $60k to $250k, and we've been building since 2011. Pages for services, completed projects with photos, our process from estimate to handover, and a quote request form asking for budget and timeline. Solid, clean look — deep green and timber, nothing flashy.”
Building costs nothing. Sign up without a card, describe your company, and generate the entire site — gallery, services, quote form — then walk through every page before spending a dollar.
Going live starts at $10/month on the Maker plan, which covers what a contractor's site actually needs: your own domain, hosting and SSL, quote request forms, SEO controls so local searches surface you, and 100 credits a month — plenty to keep the gallery growing job by job. See all plans →
5-day free trial · Cancel anytime
Yes — the gallery is the heart of the site. Load it with your own photos, organized by project or by service, and grow it as you finish jobs: tell the AI "add the Garden District remodel" and it's up. No designer, no waiting.
It is. You get free credits at sign-up — no card — enough to generate the site and click through every page. A plan only comes into it when you publish: Maker is $10/month, and every plan opens with a 5-day free trial.
Yes. Point a domain you already own at the site or register a new one inside GetSite. SSL is automatic on every published site, so yourcompany.com shows the padlock without you configuring anything.
Yes — quote request forms are built in, and you choose the fields: project type, budget range, timeline, address. Submissions arrive in your GetSite dashboard and by email, so nothing depends on you picking up from a ladder.
Yes — GetSite runs in the browser, phone included. Photograph the finished deck, open your site, and tell the AI to add it to the gallery before you pull out of the driveway. Service and price changes work the same way: type what changed, and it's changed.
Tell the AI what you build — the site that wins your next job is about a minute away.
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