Hacking and Demolition Services
HACKING CONTRACTOR
Professional Hacking Services
Whether for the purposes of reinstatement of renovation, our experienced team can perform hacking services such as wall hacking, floor hacking, general demolition and dismantling work in any existing condition to its bare form. Our hacking specialists can efficiently and quickly accomplish any task that you require for your property.
Dismantling and Removal
We provide professional dismantling and removal of built-in furnitures, fixtures as well as structures. This can include wall partitions, kitchen systems, ceilings as well as ceilings. We are able to execute and perform dismantling operations efficiently in a hassle-free manner. This service is applicable for HDB flats as well as commercial properties.
Hacking Works
Our team provides hacking of non-load bearing structures including walls and concrete in your property. This could be part of a reinstatement project or a simple job to create openings or half-height walls for your desired effect. Floor and wall finishes such as parquet and tiles can also be hacked and removed to the bare surface with our efficient hacking service.
Demolition Works
We are able to demolish larger building structures as part of a project efficiently and in safe manner, including assessing the site and obtaining the necessary approval.
What We Do
When we carry out dismantling or removal work, we seldom begin the moment we arrive. Built-in furniture and old structures have their own ways of settling into a home or shop. A cabinet may cling to the wall a little more firmly on one side. A partition may hide screws that were added years later by another worker. Even a ceiling panel tells a story through the slight sag in its frame. So before touching anything, we take a slow walk around and place our hands lightly on the surfaces. These small gestures help us understand how each piece should come apart.
Once the picture becomes clear, we begin dismantling in measured steps. A kitchen system that has served many years must be loosened carefully so the tiles around it do not crack. Wardrobes built tightly into HDB recesses need to be eased out bit by bit. Partition walls come down in sections rather than in a single strike, because wires and pipes often run quietly behind them. When something resists, we pause instead of forcing it. A little patience here saves a great deal of repair later.
Hacking work demands the same attention. A non-load bearing wall may look simple, but the concrete can vary in thickness, and the noise carries differently through each room. We work slowly at first, listening to the sound of the hammer on the surface. Only when the tone tells us the structure is safe to break do we proceed with stronger force. Floor finishes — parquet, vinyl, tiles — each require their own rhythm. Some lift gently, others cling tightly to the substrate. The aim is always the same: to reveal the bare surface without harming it.
Demolition, when required, is another kind of work altogether. Larger structures need planning, not strength alone. We study the site lines, check for reinforcement bars, understand where the weight rests. Approvals are secured, boundaries are marked, and only then do we begin. Even in the loudness of demolition, there is a silent discipline beneath it — an awareness that every strike shapes the next moment.
When the dust settles and the last piece is cleared, the space stands open once more. Empty, a little raw, but ready to be built upon again. It is in that quiet openness that the work finds its purpose.



