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Innovative Building Services
Artisan Home Builder | Remodeling Contractor | Custom Woodwork | Design & Build | High Performance Building
Innovative Building Services
Innovative Building Services
5428 Bartholow RdSykesville Maryland 21784USA
+12406242842
Business Description
We are a full-service in-house design and build remodeling company. Our team of Designers and Project Managers utilizes the latest in design and management technology to streamline the construction and remodeling process. We service the majority of central Maryland and DC. From small custom built-in cabinet projects made by our craftspeople in our wood shop, to Kitchens , Bathrooms , Mudrooms , laundry rooms , whole home remodels and all your home services needs in between were here to help. we offer free in home estimates and lifetime service.
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About Sykesville
Sykesville is a small town in Carroll County, Maryland, United States. The town lies 20 miles (32 km) west of Baltimore and 40 miles (64 km) north of Washington D.C. The population was 4,436 at the 2010 census. BudgetTravel.com named Sykesville 'Coolest Small Town in America' in June 2016. == History == Prior to European colonization, the area that is now Sykesville was used as a hunting ground by Native Americans from the Susquehannock and Lenape nations. By the late 1800s, many Europeans (predominantly from Germany and Scotland) had settled in Sykesville in pursuit of farming and mining.The land on which Sykesville sits started out as part of the 3,000-acre (12 km2) Springfield Estate, a slave plantation owned by wealthy Baltimore shipbuilder William Patterson. In 1803, Patterson's daughter Elizabeth, married Napoléon Bonaparte's younger brother Jérôme, but when she arrived in Europe as Jérôme's bride, Napoléon refused to let Betsy Patterson Bonaparte set foot on land. Napoléon refused the marriage of the two, and would not let Elizabeth set foot on France's soil. He was determined that Jerome marry into royalty, and sent Betsy back home. Denied by Napoléon, she was never able to see her husband again, leaving her to raise their son alone in the United States. Upon the death of William in 1824, his son George Patterson inherited the estate.