
Neighborhoods
Interior design in Peters Township.
Peters Township is a fast-growing Washington County township of newer construction on generous lots: post-1990 colonials, modern farmhouses, and contemporaries with big rooms and builder-grade finish. Most of what we design here is the custom version the builder never offered.
The houses
Peters Township has been one of Washington County's fastest-growing areas for two decades, and the housing stock shows it: post-1990 two-story colonials, modern farmhouses, and newer contemporaries on half-acre to full-acre lots. For a designer, that means generous rooms, open sightlines, and plenty of natural light, but also a lot of builder-grade sameness, with kitchens, baths, and trim packages straight from a catalog. The design work here is less about rescuing old bones and more about giving a well-built house a point of view, one room at a time.
What we design here
Rooms drawn for Peters Township houses.
Builder-grade kitchens replanned as custom: layouts, renderings, and cabinet-level specs
Primary bath redesigns with spa-level tile, stone, and fixture packages
Basement and theater room plans that turn raw square footage into real rooms
Interior packages for rear additions and sunrooms so new space reads as original
Outdoor kitchen and patio palettes planned as an extension of the interior
Designing around the constraints
The constraints in Peters Township are subtler than in Pittsburgh's older neighborhoods. Many subdivisions carry HOA review standards, so anything visible from outside (sunroom glazing, addition cladding) has to be documented and defensible, and a rendered design package makes that case better than a verbal pitch. The trickier problem is matching a builder's details from a decade ago: trim profiles, floor heights, and window lines that are no longer stocked. Good design decides deliberately where to match and where to break, so new work reads as intentional rather than patched.
Why Integrated
ICR, our sister company under Integrated Enterprise Group, has been building in Peters Township for years, with projects on Majestic Drive, Legacy Drive, Windvale, and Breezewood. IDS drawings are made for that crew: dimensioned, specified, and buildable in these exact houses. Pricing is published per room, and the $99 consultation credits toward your project when you move ahead.

Published pricing
Per-room packages, same published price in Peters Township as everywhere else.
The $99 consultation credits off your project. Complexity scales the room rate; the calculator shows the math.
Basic Refresh
from $750 / room
The consultation + a realistic 3D rendering of your room + a mood board.
Room Design
from $1,500 / room
Everything in Basic Refresh + a material selection buying guide. One list, ready to shop.
Design + Sourcing
from $2,500 / room
Everything in Room Design + hands-on selection, sourcing and procurement coordination, and an execution-ready package.
Questions from Peters Township
What does interior design cost in Peters Township?
Our pricing is published per room. A Design Consultation is $99 for two hours on site, credited toward your project. Basic Refresh starts at $750 per room, Room Design at $1,500 (adds a material selection buying guide), and Design + Sourcing at $2,500 (hands-on selection, sourcing, and an execution-ready package). Complexity scales the price: a room keeping its layout is x1.0, a full reconfiguration is x1.5.
Can a designer match the builder-grade details in my 2012 home?
Yes, and deciding where matching matters is the actual design work. Trim profiles, baseboard heights, and floor lines from a decade ago often are not stocked anymore, so we spec what carries through and what gets upgraded, then document it so your builder is not guessing. The goal is a renovation that reads intentional, not patched in.
Will the 3D renderings look like my actual rooms?
Yes. Every package includes realistic renderings built from your room's real dimensions, windows, and sightlines, not a stock template. In Peters Township that earns its keep twice: you see the finished room before anything is ordered, and HOA review boards see exactly what an exterior-visible change will look like.
Do we have to build with ICR if IDS does the design?
No. The design set is yours: drawings, selections, and specs any qualified contractor can build from. That said, the design folds directly into an ICR build if you want one accountable team, and ICR already knows these subdivisions, so nothing gets lost between the drawing and the job site.
Next neighborhood
Whitehall