How to use the Lok-N-Blok territory map
Start with the state page that matches the build site, then use the local exposure notes to prepare a more specific preorder, demo, or distributor conversation. Coastal projects usually need stronger documentation around design wind, openings, roof connection, flood elevation, and carrier expectations. Inland projects may lean harder on wildfire, tornado, termite, labor shortage, or speed-to-assembly reasons for choosing a mortarless interlocking concrete block system.
Each state page is written for buyers who are comparing Lok-N-Blok with wood framing, CMU, ICF, precast concrete, or conventional masonry. The goal is not to replace a stamped engineering package or the authority having jurisdiction. The goal is to give homeowners, builders, developers, and real estate partners a clean local starting point: what risk matters, what proof may be requested, and which next action makes the most sense.
For homeowners, the best next step is usually a live design demo or preorder review. For builders and distributors, the territory path should include service area, crew availability, first pilot project, local supply relationships, and the sales proof needed to win repeat projects. As Lok-N-Blok adds more state and city pages, this hub becomes the crawlable map that connects high-intent local searches to the right project path.