The Azul Ridge
Boulder City
The Azul Ridge is a home remodel in Boulder City, Nevada, designed and remodeled by Kingdom & Co. The design leads with blue: a palette carried through the finish work of the home rather than treated as an accent. Boulder City is one of the more heavily regulated jurisdictions in Southern Nevada, and the project sits at the intersection of two things Kingdom & Co. does well as a design-build firm: a considered design language executed at a high finish standard, and an operational process that clears the specific permitting and review path Boulder City requires.
The Azul Ridge
The Azul Ridge is a home remodel in Boulder City, Nevada, designed and remodeled by Kingdom & Co. The design leads with blue: a palette carried through the finish work of the home rather than treated as an accent. Boulder City is one of the more heavily regulated jurisdictions in Southern Nevada, and the project sits at the intersection of two things Kingdom & Co. does well as a design-build firm: a considered design language executed at a high finish standard, and an operational process that clears the specific permitting and review path Boulder City requires.

Blue is the language of the house. Rather than a single accent wall or an isolated tile choice, the palette runs through the home as a consistent design decision.
The result is a coherent interior that reads as intentional at every turn: the blue is present in the parts of the room your eye lands on first, and it holds together at every scale from cabinetry to the smaller detail moments. The photography below carries the palette better than any description can.



Boulder City Is Its Own Building Environment
Most Las Vegas valley remodels happen inside the jurisdictions of Clark County, the City of Las Vegas, Henderson, or North Las Vegas. Boulder City is not one of those jurisdictions. It has its own municipal government, its own building department, its own permitting rhythm, and a long-standing set of rules that a lot of builders working out of Las Vegas or Henderson are not set up to navigate.
- A few of the frameworks that shape any Boulder City remodel:
- A growth-management framework in place since 1979 that shapes how construction happens across the city
- A dark-sky ordinance that affects exterior lighting specification on any project touching the exterior of the home
- Historic-neighborhood character in older parts of the city, which can add architectural review to the standard permitting path
- A small-town review culture that runs on relationships and repeat contact, not on the highervolume permit workflows most Las Vegas builders are used to.
Kingdom & Co. runs projects across every jurisdiction in the Las Vegas valley, Boulder City included. The Azul Ridge cleared its permitting path and reached completion because the design-build team plans the regulatory work in the same phase as the design, not after.
Why the Award Record Matters on a Project Like This
Kingdom & Co. is an award-winning design-build firm. The credential list currently reads:
- 2025 NARI Remodeler of the Year (regional), awarded for The Parker in Las Vegas
- 2026 NARI Remodeler of the Year, Residential Interior Over $500,000 (regional), awarded for The Lexington in Henderson
- Eight episodes on HGTV’s Property Brothers
- Featured in Architectural Digest and Martha Stewart
- Best of Las Vegas Gold designation, Custom Home Builder
NARI Remodeler of the Year is not a beauty contest. The judging framework evaluates craftsmanship, design execution, problem-solving, and project management as separate categories. Winning at the regional level in two consecutive years means the firm is being scored, publicly, on how well the whole process runs, from concept through the last punch-list item. That is the same operational standard applied here, on a project sitting inside one of Southern Nevada’s most heavily regulated municipalities.
Frequently Asked Questions
Boulder City has its own municipal building department and permit process, separate from Clark County. The city has a growth-management framework in place since 1979 that shapes how new construction happens, a dark-sky ordinance that affects exterior lighting specification, and additional architectural review requirements in its older historic neighborhoods. Every Boulder City project needs to be planned around the city’s specific permit path, which is different in cadence from a project in Las Vegas or Henderson.
Yes. Kingdom & Co. runs remodels and builds across every jurisdiction in the Las Vegas valley, including Boulder City. The Azul Ridge is a Boulder City remodel handled by Kingdom & Co. under a design-build delivery model. The firm’s permitting process is planned in the same phase as the design work, so Boulder City’s specific rules and review culture are addressed before construction begins rather than after.
Kingdom & Co. has won regional NARI Remodeler of the Year in both 2025 and 2026. The 2026 win was in the Residential Interior Over $500,000 category, for The Lexington in Henderson. The firm has also appeared in eight episodes of HGTV’s Property Brothers, been featured in Architectural Digest and Martha Stewart, and holds a Best of Las Vegas Gold designation for Custom Home Builder.
The single-team model is often better suited to restricted jurisdictions than the traditional split of architect, interior designer, and general contractor. Because one team is responsible for both the design and the construction, the permitting requirements can be factored into the design at the earliest phase rather than fought through change orders after the fact. On a Boulder City project like The Azul Ridge, that coordination is what keeps the timeline intact.
Boulder City is one of only two incorporated Nevada cities where gaming is prohibited, and its municipal culture is small-town by design. The building department is smaller than Clark County’s, runs on relationships and repeat contact, and applies rules that reflect Boulder City’s specific history as the town built for the Hoover Dam workforce in the 1930s. Clark County’s larger permit volume produces a different working rhythm. A builder used to Clark County’s cadence has to adjust to Boulder City’s.


















