Assisted, not abandoned
The path can include guidance, documentation, EasyKit, delivery preparation, and assembly support.
For Soleta, self-build does not mean building alone without skill, tools, or local responsibility. It means the client can participate in a structured project path, while the local team handles the legal, technical, physical, and safety responsibilities required on site.
The path can include guidance, documentation, EasyKit, delivery preparation, and assembly support.
Skilled local builders and professionals remain essential for execution and compliance.
Plans, EasyKit, support, and local work must be separated before assembly.
Most assembly problems begin before assembly: wrong foundation, poor access, missing tools, or unclear responsibilities.
Step 1
The model controls documentation, EasyKit scope, and assembly logic.
Step 2
Planning Information or Complete Project sets the documentation basis.
Step 3
Permits, engineering, foundation, MEP, and site rules must be checked locally.
Step 4
Core or Extended should be chosen after model and responsibilities are clearer.
Step 5
Access, unloading, storage, and weather protection must be planned.
Step 6
Builders, engineer, site supervisor, lifting equipment, tools, and safety must be aligned.
Step 7
Remote, Checkpoint, or Dedicated Assembly Support can help reduce confusion.
EasyKit can make the local assembly path more controlled by preparing selected components, structural GLULAM logic, package notes, labeling, delivery preparation, and assembly documentation. Final scope depends on model, Core or Extended package, production rules, and verified project details.
Core and Extended can reduce some local sourcing uncertainty, depending on verified scope.
The structural GLULAM logic can help organize assembly sequence and checkpoints.
Prepared and labeled elements can make local handling clearer.
EasyKit works best when connected to the correct plan package and local review.
EasyKit and assembly support do not remove the local side of the project.
Local authorities define what is required.
Structure, loads, foundation, climate, and code compliance must be checked locally.
Soil, slope, drainage, frost, bearing, levels, anchoring, and access are site-specific.
Electrical, plumbing, heating, cooling, ventilation, water, sewage, and drainage remain local.
Local builders, site supervisor, tools, lifting, safety, and inspections remain local.
Interiors, terraces, landscaping, paths, drainage, and final works remain local unless verified.
Equipment, storage, staging, protection, and inspection on arrival must be locally prepared.
Support does not transfer local legal responsibility to Soleta.
Assembly cannot be clean if the site is not ready.
Roads, turns, gradients, bridge limits, height, width, and final approach must be reviewed.
The site needs safe space for truck access, lifting equipment, labour, and component staging.
Components need dry, stable, protected, ventilated storage before assembly.
Levels, dimensions, anchoring, bearing points, moisture protection, and tolerances must be checked locally.
Rain, snow, wind, mud, heat, and humidity can affect delivery, storage, and assembly.
Builders, engineer, site supervisor, lifting equipment, tools, and safety plan must be prepared.
Prepared structural components are unforgiving when the foundation is wrong. If the foundation dimensions, levels, bearing points, anchors, or tolerances do not match the structural logic, assembly can be delayed, corrected, or made more expensive.
Local professionals must verify the foundation matches the selected model and package requirements.
Accurate levels and bearing points matter for prefabricated assembly.
Anchors, plates, moisture barriers, and connection zones must be locally reviewed.
Fixing a wrong foundation after delivery can create cost, delay, and rework.
Foundation interface is a good moment for checkpoint support if the local team needs review.
A successful local assembly path needs clear roles before the kit arrives.
Chooses model direction, coordinates local team, prepares decisions, and accepts local responsibility.
Reviews structure, loads, foundation, code compliance, and required sign-off.
Executes the physical assembly, tools, lifting, protection, and site work.
Coordinates safety, sequencing, labour, inspections, and daily site decisions.
Handle electrical, plumbing, heating, cooling, ventilation, water, sewage, and utilities.
Helps clarify documentation, package logic, checkpoints, and support questions depending on selected level.
Support can help the local team, but it does not replace the local team.
Support package - preview
Best for: questions, photo review, documentation clarification, and selected stage guidance.
Indicative placeholder price: To be confirmed.
Support package - preview
Best for: structured review at important milestones such as delivery readiness, foundation interface, or structural stage.
Indicative placeholder price: To be confirmed.
Coordination package - preview
Best for: more complex projects, less experienced local teams, broader EasyKit scope, or repeated units.
Indicative placeholder price: To be confirmed.
Use this checklist before you assume the project is ready for assembly.
Understand access, unloading, storage, and delivery readiness.
Compare Remote, Checkpoint, and Dedicated support levels.
Preview future worksheets, equipment planning tools, and site-readiness resources.
Understand what must be checked locally before execution.
Understand how documentation and EasyKit connect.
1
Local builders, engineers, and site supervisors remain essential.
2
Foundation mismatch can create serious delay and rework.
3
Poor unloading or exposed storage can damage components before assembly starts.
4
EasyKit is not a finished house and does not replace local labour or MEP.
5
Lifting, tools, scaffolding, PPE, and site safety must be handled locally.
6
Support is most useful before delivery and before critical assembly stages.
Client participation may be possible, but skilled local builders, professionals, tools, safety planning, and local compliance remain essential.
No. EasyKit is a package path, not local construction labour.
No. Assembly support helps your local team; it does not replace the local team.
Local requirements, foundation interface, delivery access, unloading, storage, and local team readiness.
No. Foundation accuracy must be verified locally before assembly.
Local engineering review is usually necessary and must be confirmed according to local rules.
Core has a narrower scope; Extended has a broader scope. The easier path depends on model, site, team, and risk.
Final CTA
Start with the model and plan package, then verify local requirements, delivery readiness, foundation interface, and support level before assembly begins.