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Townhouse - Precision Inspection Landing Page Template
The Townhouse Precision Inspection landing page template is built for home inspection services targeting townhouse buyers, attorneys, and relocating professionals. It leads with an interactive calculator, presents real inspection data in a split-screen layout, and drives direct bookings through a focused three-step form. Data is the hero. No stock photography.
by Rocket studio
This is a single-page, split-screen landing page template designed for townhouse inspection services. It opens with a live-styled calculator that generates a personalized inspection scope and flat-rate price before the visitor scrolls. Metric columns, redacted report samples, and a streamlined booking form make the case clearly and efficiently.
This template serves inspection professionals who want to convert cautious buyers into confirmed bookings without lengthy back-and-forth. It is purpose-built for the townhouse inspection niche, where shared walls, rooftop decks, and common plumbing lines create distinct concerns that generic inspection pages do not address.
Most inspection service pages describe what an inspector does in general terms. They do not help the visitor understand their specific risk, their likely cost, or why this service is worth booking today. That gap loses clients who are deep in due diligence but still unconvinced.
You get a fully structured, single-page landing page template with a clear visual hierarchy and every section tied to a specific conversion goal. The layout is split-screen throughout, pairing explanatory content on the left with inspection evidence on the right.




Theme
Atelier Studio
Creative direction
Calculator/Tool First
Color system
Warm Stone
Style
Gallery + Detail
Direction
Lead Generation
Page Sections
Live Inspection Scope Calculator
Oversized Metric Display Columns
Split-screen System Sections
Escalating Urgency Scroll Sequence
Sticky Booking Call-to-action Bar
Email-gated Sample Report Download
What type of inspection business is this template designed for?
Does the calculator output prices automatically?
Can this template capture leads who are not ready to book?
What does the booking call-to-action open when clicked?
Is this template suitable for a general home inspection service?
This template is built around a specific set of functional sections and interaction patterns drawn directly from the brief.
The header calculator lets visitors select townhouse size, age bracket, and number of shared walls. It instantly returns an estimated inspection scope, a typical defect count for that profile, and a quoted flat-rate price. The primary booking call-to-action appears directly inside the calculator output.
Three towering metric columns sit in the right panel of the header: total townhouses inspected, average defects found per unit, and average negotiation savings. Each number is rendered in large teal type against charcoal, with a counter animation triggered on scroll-in.
Below the fold, each section pairs a specific townhouse system on the left with a corresponding page from a redacted inspection report on the right. Systems covered include party wall integrity, roof-to-unit water paths, shared-line plumbing, and HVAC zoning.
The page is sequenced intentionally. Content moves from cosmetic findings up to structural risk as the visitor scrolls. The final split pairs a clean report cover with a closing-table photo and a single closing line that ties the report directly to value recovered at the table.
After the second scroll section, a persistent sticky bar carries the primary call-to-action. It stays visible as the visitor continues reading, reducing the friction between decision and action.
A secondary text link below the main call-to-action offers a sample inspection report download, gated by email only. This captures visitors who are not ready to book but are far enough into their research to want documented proof of quality.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Header calculator panel | Let visitors input townhouse details and receive a personalized scope and price |
| Metric columns panel | Display headline numbers that establish scale, accuracy, and negotiation value |
| Party wall section | Explain shared-wall failure risks and show a real annotated report excerpt |
| Roof water path section | Detail roof-to-unit drainage issues and show corresponding thermal imaging |
| Shared-line plumbing section | Cover common plumbing failures in attached units with moisture-meter evidence |
| HVAC zoning section | Explain zoning defects in multi-story townhouses with inspection documentation |
| Escalating risk section | Tighten urgency by shifting from cosmetic findings to structural concerns |
| Closing split section | Pair a report cover with a closing-table photo and the value-recovery statement |
| Sticky booking bar | Keep the primary call-to-action visible throughout the scroll journey |
| Three-step booking form | Collect address, preferred date, and payment in a single streamlined flow |
The visual identity follows an Executive Suite theme built on the Cloud Canvas color palette. The overall feel is precise and controlled, like a well-lit corner office early in the morning. There is no stock photography anywhere in the design. Data and documentation carry the visual weight.
The split-screen layout is designed to restack cleanly on smaller screens so each panel reads as a focused vertical section rather than a compressed side-by-side view. The calculator inputs and metric columns are given priority placement when stacked.
The conversion strategy is built into the layout sequence itself. The visitor interacts with the calculator before they have scrolled, which means the service has already demonstrated competence before asking for payment. Each subsequent section adds a layer of evidence.
This template is designed specifically for the townhouse property inspection niche. It accounts for the structural and mechanical concerns unique to attached and multi-story townhouse units, including party walls, shared utility lines, and rooftop deck access. The layout and content structure can support inspection firms of various sizes, from solo operators to multi-inspector teams.