Southern Wayne County — Huron River Corridor — Telegraph Road & Allen Road
Phase III Construction serves Brownstown Township with 24/7 emergency restoration and full insurance claim advocacy. From newer vinyl-sided colonials in the Brownstown subdivisions to low-lying floodplain areas near the Flat Rock border, Phase III knows this corridor, documents every claim completely, and fights for full recovery on every southern Wayne County project.
From emergency response to complete rebuild — Phase III handles every phase and fights your insurance claim start to finish.
Full fire documentation and rebuild in Brownstown Township's newer residential subdivisions. Phase III boards, secures, and documents before any work disturbs the loss scene, then advocates for a complete scope that returns your home to pre-loss condition — or better. Learn more →
Brownstown Township sits in a high-frequency southwest storm corridor. Phase III documents hail impact on architectural shingles and vinyl siding thoroughly, supplements for full-section replacement when matching is no longer available, and fights against partial-patch scope on every Brownstown claim. Learn more →
Emergency extraction, drying, and complete scope documentation for Brownstown Township's floodplain-adjacent subdivisions near the Huron River and Flat Rock border. Phase III establishes the covered-peril distinction between storm-driven entry, sump pump failure, and ground water before any mitigation begins. Learn more →
Brownstown Township's newer colonials with open floor plans and interconnected ductwork can distribute smoke widely after a kitchen or garage fire. Phase III maps the full smoke envelope through every affected zone and supplements for secondary-room damage as standard practice on every claim. Learn more →
Phase III manages every step from first call to final inspection.
Phase III reaches Brownstown Township from Westland in approximately 25 to 35 minutes via I-75 South or Telegraph Road. We respond 24/7 to all southern Wayne County communities and are on scene to stabilize and document before any materials are disturbed.
Brownstown Township's 1980s-2000s residential stock has characteristics that matter for claims: vinyl siding with limited matching availability, architectural shingle systems at mid-life, large lot sizes with wide debris fields, and basement systems serving properties in or near the Huron River floodplain. Phase III captures everything at current replacement cost, not depreciated value.
We attend the adjuster inspection, supplement for missed scope, and negotiate line by line. Brownstown Township homeowners should never accept a partial-match siding estimate, a spot-repair roof scope, or a truncated basement claim. Phase III fights for what your policy actually covers.
As a licensed Michigan GC, Phase III pulls all permits through the Brownstown Township Building Department and manages every trade from demo through final inspection. We restore your home to pre-loss condition or better.
Phase III covers Brownstown Township and all adjacent southern Wayne County and Monroe County border communities.
ZIP codes served: 48183, 48174.
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Tell us about the damage and we will contact you within the hour. No obligation. No cost.
Yes. Phase III serves Brownstown Township and the full southern Wayne County and Monroe County border area. We respond 24/7 to fire, hail, water, storm, smoke, and mold damage. Call (734) 237-7322 any time.
Phase III reaches Brownstown Township from Westland in approximately 25 to 35 minutes via I-75 South or Telegraph Road. We respond 24/7 and are typically on scene within 1 hour of your call.
Brownstown Township's mix of 1980s-2000s vinyl-sided colonials and older Telegraph Road corridor development creates distinct claim profiles. Newer subdivisions see hail damage requiring full-section siding replacement and full shingle replacement. Low-lying areas near the Huron River floodplain generate significant basement flooding and sump pump claims during heavy rain events.
Yes. Phase III handles all phases: documentation, adjuster attendance, supplements, and negotiation. We have handled 1,000+ claims across SE Michigan and recovered more than $10 million for homeowners.
Yes. Phase III works with all major Michigan carriers including State Farm, Auto-Owners, Allstate, Farm Bureau, Frankenmuth Mutual, and Citizens. We approach each claim with the specific policy terms in hand and advocate for full covered scope.
No. Brownstown Township homeowners frequently have claims under-scoped on vinyl siding matching, architectural shingle replacement, and basement water scope near the floodplain. Phase III supplements routinely recover $5,000 to $25,000 above initial estimates on Brownstown Township claims.
Yes. Phase III holds Licensed Residential Builder #262000615, carries full general liability insurance, and is BBB A+ rated. We pull all permits through the Brownstown Township Building Department for every project.
Yes. Michigan law gives you the right to choose your own licensed contractor. Phase III advocates for the Brownstown Township homeowner, not the carrier, on every claim.
Do not re-enter until the Brownstown Township Fire Department clears the scene. Call Phase III at (734) 237-7322 immediately. Do not discard or clean anything before we document the scene. Every item removed before documentation reduces your claim value.
Emergency stabilization within 24 to 48 hours. Brownstown Township Building Department permit review typically runs 5 to 10 business days. Active construction on a hail or water claim runs 1 to 3 weeks; fire rebuilds run 6 to 12 weeks depending on scope.
Yes. If your carrier is delaying, underpaying, or denying scope, Phase III reviews your documentation, identifies what is missing, and files formal supplements. We have done this on more than 1,000 SE Michigan claims.
A supplement formally corrects the adjuster's estimate. In Brownstown Township, the most valuable categories are full vinyl siding replacement when matching is unavailable, complete shingle replacement after hail, basement water scope in floodplain-adjacent areas, and code-upgrade requirements. Phase III pursues all of these as standard practice on every Brownstown Township claim.
Phase III serves Brownstown Township and all of southern Wayne County. 24/7 emergency response, full insurance advocacy from first call to final check.
☎ (734) 237-7322Brownstown Township is one of southern Wayne County's fastest-growing communities, a sprawling township that expanded aggressively from the 1980s through the 2000s with subdivisions pushing south from Trenton and Woodhaven toward the Monroe County line. Unlike the older Downriver cities to the north, Brownstown's residential character is defined by newer construction: vinyl-sided colonials on generous lots, attached garages, and subdivision streets that wind through areas that were farmland or wetland as recently as the early 1990s. The two main commercial corridors — Telegraph Road and Allen Road — also carry older strip and industrial development that adds a different claim profile to the eastern portions of the township. Phase III Construction covers the full Brownstown Township service area including both ZIP codes 48183 and 48174, and our crew regularly works the Monroe County border territory where fewer regional contractors are willing to reach.
The western and southern portions of Brownstown Township sit in low-lying terrain adjacent to the Huron River floodplain, particularly near the Flat Rock municipal border. Subdivisions built in these areas in the 1990s often have basement systems that were engineered for the conditions present at the time of construction, but climate-driven changes in rainfall intensity have stressed sump pump systems and drain tile networks beyond their original design parameters. When major rain events hit this corridor, Phase III regularly responds to Brownstown Township homes where the basement has taken on water through one or more pathways: storm-driven surface water entry, sump pump failure under sustained pump demand, and drain tile backup from overtaxed municipal storm systems. The coverage determination for each of these entry mechanisms is different, and carriers will challenge scope aggressively if the distinction is not documented at first response. Phase III arrives with the documentation discipline to establish covered-peril status before any mitigation work disturbs the evidence — this is the difference between a full basement restoration claim and an out-of-pocket loss for the homeowner.
Brownstown Township's geographic position in the southwest storm corridor means that hail-producing systems tracking northeast from Indiana and Ohio frequently make direct hits on the township before dissipating further north. The newer residential construction that dominates Brownstown — architectural shingles installed in the 1990s and 2000s, vinyl siding in a range of profiles and colors that are no longer in production — creates specific documentation challenges. Architectural shingles from this era develop bruising and granule loss that is visible under proper lighting and inspection protocol but easy for adjusters to minimize or miss entirely on a cursory walk. Vinyl siding from discontinued production runs cannot be matched, which means that a carrier's standard line-item repair approach — replace only the damaged panels — leaves visible color and sheen mismatches that are unacceptable for a competent restoration. Phase III's Brownstown Township approach documents hail density, impact diameter, and siding match availability before the adjuster arrives, giving us the evidentiary foundation to supplement for full-section replacement when the facts support it, which on newer Brownstown homes they frequently do.
Phase III coordinates directly with the Brownstown Township Building and Fire Departments on every permitted project. Township permit review typically runs 5 to 10 business days for standard restoration scopes, and Phase III's documentation package — detailed scope of work, insurance adjuster authorization, and licensed GC credentials — moves through review without the delays that plague contractors who submit incomplete applications. For homeowners in the southern Brownstown ZIP code (48183) near the Monroe County border, Phase III's regional coverage means you receive the same response times and the same advocacy that northern Brownstown homeowners receive, without the penalty of living at the edge of most contractors' service maps. We cover the full southern Wayne County and Monroe County border corridor as a primary service area, not an afterthought. Every Brownstown Township claim receives Phase III's complete supplement discipline, full building department coordination, and the same recovery standard we apply to every SE Michigan job regardless of the township or ZIP code.
If your Brownstown Township home has been affected by fire, storm, hail, water, or mold damage, call Phase III at (734) 237-7322. We respond 24/7 throughout southern Wayne County and the Monroe County border corridor.