Our Mission
Mission Statement Lifting Spirits With Spaces

Each project we work on is led by our mission statement
Genuine care for our clients and an understanding of their needs drives our process
We strive to lift spirits with spaces. This mission drives everything that we do on our projects daily. Making certain that our clients come out of the other end of their remodeling projects feeling lifted and brighter is why we do what we do. This wouldn't be possible without the incredible people that we have selected to be a part of our team.
A passion for design, a passion for building and more importantly a passion for one another is what we stand for. We carry this to each project and love to see the impact this brings to the lives of those we work for and work with. It terms of tangible delivery, our unique design-build process makes it all possible.
Making Design-Build accessible to all
The NEDC team is proud to sponsor the Room to Dream Foundation
It only takes one project with the Room to Dream Foundation to completely fill those involved with feelings of joy and gratitude. A foundation like Room to Dream serves as a reminder of just how much impact improving one's environment can have on someone's life. Making beautiful and functional spaces accessible for all and bringing design-build to those who need it is something we work fervently towards.

Featured in the Press

As featured in Modern Luxury Interiors
Our initial vision was to infuse the space with a fresh, modern aesthetic tailored specifically to the client’s style. As the project evolved, it became clear that the potential for this property extended far beyond a simple refresh.

Conversations with CEO New England Design & Construction David Muñiz Supple
Throughout history, an architect was known as the master builder. This revered and time-honored role has been the impetus behind the creation of every magnificent structure across the ages—from the cathedral of Notre Dame to the majesty of the Acropolis in Athens. From the Colosseum in Rome to the grandeur of the Eiffel Tower overlooking Paris.

5 Bostonians Who Continue To Give Back in Important Ways
Giving someone a new space to feel better about life is beyond gratifying; it forever changes the lives of recipients and those who helped provide the home.

Local Company Offers to Build ‘Sanitization Stations' for Health Care Workers
David Supple, CEO of New England Design and Construction, says it all started when he was contacted at the start of the pandemic by a client looking for extra masks for her husband’s hospital.

A Former Baseball Player's Property Is Reinvented For Modern Suburbia
Owning a 7,246-square-foot home that was custom designed and built by a major league outfielder is a brilliant conversation-starter at cocktail parties. Then reality sinks in. A family with several young children loved their new home built by former Red Sox Carl Crawford in Wellesley—it even had a massive batting cage, which had to go—but needed some revamping to fit their lifestyle.

Check Out This Bathroom's Minimalist Makeover in a Chestnut Hill Home
“Spaces always begin with an idea, and so it’s vital to start with the client’s vision for whatever space we’re creating,” says Supple. “It’s our job to ask the right questions and pull that vision out of them..."

Company says ‘Hey Thanks’ to front line workers with free in-home shower and sanitation station
“It’s been really hard to balance both being a mom and a doctor,” Bernstein said. “When I enter the house, I’m wearing all of my contaminated hospital clothes and so I have to basically put my arms up and say, ‘Wait, wait, wait, wait, no hugs,’ and then run-up to the third floor of my house, and carefully remove everything.”

Meet David Supple of New England Design and Construction in Mission Hill
I am a graduate of Tufts University with a degree in Architecture. In California, I trained as an architect for three years, designing, directing, and managing 50- 100, 00 square foot renovations. Throughout this process, I realized that while I could draw really beautiful pictures on paper, this often translated very differently into the construction side of projects.