Hi, I'm Chad. I bring my own torque wrench.
The crew, after a pavilion install last summer.
I started NWA Assembly because too many neighbors were ending Saturday with a half-built playset and a bag of leftover hardware that wasn't supposed to be leftover.
Eight years of building swing sets, sheds, patio sets, and grills for friends-of-friends turned into a full-time business in 2017. We've now done over 1,200 jobs across Bentonville, Rogers, Bella Vista, and most of Benton and Washington counties. The truck is loaded the night before. The torque wrench is calibrated quarterly. The Hex keys live in a labeled tackle box, not the pocket of last week's jeans.
What that gets you, beyond a thing that doesn't squeak, is the 90 minutes back you'd otherwise have spent looking for the missing cam screw in the carpet. We do the work the way we'd want it done at our own house, which means we measure twice, anchor every leg, and never leave with cardboard in your driveway.
We're insured (one million in liability, plus workers' comp), background-checked, and stand behind the workmanship for as long as you own the structure. If a bolt I set ever loosens, I'll come back and tighten it. That's not marketing copy, that's just what good work looks like.
Five things every job starts with.
1. Show up on time
If we said 8am, we mean 7:55. The single biggest complaint in our industry is no-shows. We don't.
2. Inventory before tools
Every bolt counted before a single screw is driven. Saves you hours of "wait, where did this go?"
3. Anchor everything
If it sits outside, it gets anchored. Wind in NWA is no joke and your insurance won't cover an unsecured swing set.
4. Clean up like family is coming
Cardboard flattened, screws bagged, driveway swept. We leave it nicer than we found it.
5. Stand behind the work
Lifetime workmanship guarantee on every joint we fasten. If it loosens, we tighten it free.