Woburn, MA

Drywall Installation & Repair in Greater Boston

Drywall is the surface you see most and notice least — until it is done poorly. Wavy walls, visible seams, and cracked corners show under every light. Good drywall is invisible, and that takes skill.

Smooth, paint-ready drywall wall and ceiling in a Boston home renovation

VB Construction hangs, finishes, and repairs drywall across Greater Boston. New drywall gets hung tight, taped, and finished to a smooth, flat, paint-ready surface, with the seams and corners that separate a clean wall from an amateur one handled properly.

Repair is just as much of the work, especially in older homes. We patch holes, fix cracks, repair water damage, and blend new drywall into existing plaster so the repair vanishes. Matching texture and feathering the joint is what keeps a patch from showing as a shadow under the light.

Whether it follows new framing, a remodel, or a plumbing or electrical repair that opened a wall, we close it up so the finished surface is ready for paint and indistinguishable from the rest of the room.

Drywall is a foundational part of our complete interior construction services, behind nearly every finished room.

Blending new drywall into old plaster

Most Boston homes have plaster walls, and tying new drywall into plaster is its own skill. We match the thickness, feather the transition, and finish the joint so the seam between century-old plaster and new drywall does not telegraph through the paint. It is the kind of detail that makes a repair look like it never happened.

Drywall services

What drywall covers

Drywall Repair

A hole from a doorknob, a crack over a doorway, a water-stained ceiling, a patch left by a plumber — drywall repair makes the wall whole again so the damage simply disappears..

drywall and plaster repair →

Questions

Drywall FAQs

Can you patch a hole so it doesn't show?

Yes. A proper patch is backed, taped, finished in feathered coats, and textured to match the surrounding wall. Done right and primed, it disappears under paint. The trick is feathering the joint wide enough that no ridge shows under raking light.

Do you repair cracks that keep coming back?

Recurring cracks usually mean movement — a settling joint, a truss lifting seasonally, or an underlying issue. We address the cause where we can and use proper crack-isolation techniques so the repair holds instead of reopening in a season.