Van Nuys is one of the stronger ADU markets in the Valley.
A lot of properties have usable lot space, detached garages, or layouts where adding another unit actually makes sense. That’s why so many homeowners here start looking at ADUs, rental income, family housing, guest space, or just getting more value out of the property.
The opportunity is real.
But the projects still need to be handled correctly.
An ADU can be a smart investment or an expensive headache depending on how the front end is handled.
That’s where we come in.
We build ADUs in Van Nuys with a straightforward process that starts with the property, not assumptions.
Some neighborhoods are tight.
Some lots leave you no room.
Van Nuys has more properties where ADUs are actually realistic.
That could mean:
More options is a good thing.
It just means choosing the right one matters.
This is one of the most common ADU paths in Van Nuys.
A garage is already there, so people assume it’s simple.
Sometimes it is.
A lot of times it isn’t.
We often find:
That doesn’t kill the project.
It just means it needs to be evaluated honestly first.
For the right property, a detached ADU can be the better long-term move.
You get more privacy, cleaner separation from the main house, and more flexibility in how the space is used.
We look at:
The goal is not just adding square footage.
The goal is adding something useful.
Everyone has a different reason.
Some want rental income.
Some need housing for parents or adult children.
Some want an office, guest house, or private space that’s separate from the main house.
The best ADU plans are built around how the space will actually be used.
Not just what can be squeezed onto the lot.
Same pattern most of the time:
Most delays start early.
That’s why setup matters.
We start by looking at the property.
What actually works here? What doesn’t? What’s the smartest use of the lot?
Then we map out the project clearly before construction begins.
That avoids a lot of expensive guessing later.
Most people don’t start with a finished plan.
They start by asking if the property can support an ADU and whether it’s worth doing.
That’s the right place to begin.
Once the lot is understood, the rest gets a lot clearer.