New Mexico — Active Market

Interior finishes subcontractor serving New Mexico multifamily and commercial construction.

Innergy Interiors supplies and installs across seven CSI divisions for general contractors and developers in Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Las Cruces.

Request a New Mexico bid →

New Mexico market

Why New Mexico GCs work with Innergy.

New Mexico’s construction market is anchored by Albuquerque, with consistent secondary-market activity in Santa Fe and growing activity in Las Cruces and the southern part of the state. The economic base across the state is a mix of federal government and lab employment (Sandia National Laboratories, Los Alamos, Kirtland Air Force Base, and White Sands), healthcare anchored by Presbyterian, Lovelace, and UNM Health, the University of New Mexico, New Mexico State University, and an expanding base of warehousing, logistics, and renewable-energy employment. Multifamily and commercial pipelines reflect that mix , workforce and Class B multifamily across the Albuquerque metro, premium and hospitality-oriented projects in Santa Fe, and a growing workforce-housing pipeline in Las Cruces and the southern corridor.

Innergy’s headquarters is in El Paso, approximately four hours south of Albuquerque on I-25 and roughly an hour from Las Cruces. That proximity gives us mobilization times and logistics costs in New Mexico that compare favorably to subs based in Denver, Phoenix, or Dallas. New Mexico GCs working with Innergy get a sub who is on the ground in the region year-round rather than one mobilizing in from a distant western metro for each project.

We cover the full New Mexico service territory under one subcontract: the Albuquerque metro including Rio Rancho and the East Mountains corridor, the Santa Fe market, and Las Cruces and the southern New Mexico corridor. GCs running portfolios across multiple New Mexico markets do not need separate sub arrangements for each metro. One prequalification process. One contact. Seven divisions on every New Mexico project.

The Albuquerque metro accounts for the majority of New Mexico’s multifamily construction. Garden-style workforce multifamily along the I-25 and I-40 corridors, infill mixed-use and Class A multifamily development in the Downtown, Nob Hill, and EDo submarkets, Northeast Heights and Westside Class A residential, and commercial tenant-improvement work across the university corridor, the Uptown employment district, the Journal Center office park, and the medical corridor near UNM and Presbyterian. Renovation of older multifamily stock throughout the established neighborhoods on the north and south sides of the city rounds out the pipeline. Interior finishes scope across all of these project types falls within Innergy’s seven-division capability.

Santa Fe operates at the premium end of the New Mexico market. Hospitality, Class A residential, and mixed-use development in the state capital is specified for buyers, renters, and visitors with elevated finish expectations. Historic-context architectural and design review requirements in the Santa Fe historic districts add a compliance layer that interior finishes specifications and product submittals have to align with. Las Cruces is a smaller, growing market driven by population expansion in the Mesilla Valley, New Mexico State University enrollment, and the border-region logistics and trade economy. The Las Cruces multifamily pipeline is weighted toward workforce and Class B product with steady commercial activity.

For GCs with projects distributed across New Mexico, one Innergy relationship covers Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Las Cruces, and the corridors connecting them under a single subcontract. One prequalification process. Seven divisions. Wherever in New Mexico the project is, one contact manages the full interior finishes scope.

How we run New Mexico projects

Every New Mexico project starts with pre-construction coordination. We review the unit type matrix, confirm blocking requirements for toilet accessories and grab bars, and identify substrate and scheduling dependencies that will affect the interior finishes phase. On Santa Fe projects subject to historic-district design review, we confirm that product submittals align with the approved specifications before procurement.

During the project we sequence our own trades against your paint, cabinet, and drywall milestones. Cabinet installation does not wait on the superintendent to coordinate with the countertop sub. Flooring does not mobilize before cabinets are set and substrate inspection is documented. Window treatments go in after paint as the final finish item. Your superintendent gets one Innergy contact for the entire interior finishes phase , one schedule meeting, one RFI process, one walk at turnover.

The seven divisions covered under a New Mexico Innergy subcontract are finish carpentry and cabinets, shower doors and mirrors, flooring including LVP, tile, and carpet, Division 10 specialties (toilet accessories, partitions, ADA signage, mailboxes, fire extinguisher cabinets, wire shelving), window treatments, countertops and solid surface, and plumbing specialties. Every New Mexico project runs under the same seven-division, single-subcontract structure.

Innergy’s scope in New Mexico covers Division 9 flooring, Division 6 finish carpentry and cabinets, Division 10 specialties, and Division 12 countertops for multifamily and commercial projects under one subcontract.

7

CSI divisions under a single New Mexico subcontract

1

Active New Mexico metros — Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Las Cruces

1 day

Response time to all New Mexico bid requests

Bidding a New Mexico project?

Send us the scope. We respond to all New Mexico project inquiries within one business day.

Request a Bid