Timeline & Build Queue
Why quality takes time
A custom van is not assembled in one straight line. It moves through design decisions, parts availability, vehicle realities, fabrication, systems integration, finish work, testing, and final corrections. Good timelines create room for the work to be done correctly.
Typical Project Timeline
Small upgrades may take days. Larger system installs may take one to several weeks. Full custom builds often require multiple months from deposit to delivery depending on queue position, design complexity, component availability, and the level of fabrication involved.
Example Full-Build Flow
Week 1: final planning, teardown, vehicle prep. Weeks 2–3: rough electrical, plumbing, insulation, subfloor, wall framing. Weeks 4–6: walls, ceiling, cabinetry structure, systems mounting. Weeks 7–9: finish cabinetry, appliances, fixtures, hardware. Weeks 10–12: detail work, testing, corrections, documentation, delivery prep. Complex builds can run longer.
What Causes Delays
Common delay sources include late client decisions, backordered components, platform-specific surprises, third-party part defects, scope changes, shipping issues, and add-ons requested after construction has started. We reduce these risks through planning, but custom work will always require some flexibility.
Our Promise
We will not sacrifice the build to protect an unrealistic deadline. If a timeline shifts, we communicate why. If a decision affects delivery, we explain the tradeoff. The goal is not speed for its own sake. The goal is a van that feels right after the excitement of delivery wears off.