About Chadd
After earning a Bachelor of Science in Government from Berry College in 2011, Chadd Reynolds continued his studies at Valparaiso University School of Law, where he received his J.D. in 2014. He joined the bar that same year and has since practiced in Georgia. His academic path gave him a mix of policy and legal training that he has brought into a practice concentrated on construction-related matters.
Reynolds began his legal career upon graduation and admission to the State Bar of Georgia in 2014. He built experience handling disputes that arise out of construction projects and the contracts that govern them. Over time he took on matters that required attention to both technical details and procedural rules. He has maintained active membership in the State Bar of Georgia since 2014.
He expanded his professional involvement through local and statewide bar groups. He has been a member of the Georgia Bar Association’s Construction Section since 2019. Since 2020, he has served on the board of the Atlanta Bar Association’s Construction Section, participating in programs and meetings aimed at practitioners in the field. Those roles have kept him engaged with peers and current developments affecting builders, owners and design professionals.
At the office level, Reynolds is part of Chamberlain, Hrdlicka, White, Williams & Aughtry, PC. His work there mixes counseling and dispute resolution. He handles contract review and negotiation, and he represents clients in matters that move into litigation or arbitration. He approaches each matter by sorting the factual and contractual issues that often determine outcomes in construction disputes.
Reynolds’s practice touches both transactional and contentious sides of construction law. He has worked on claims involving payment, performance, and construction defects. He also addresses the contractual allocation of risk and the practical consequences of schedule and cost changes. His experience includes advising on remedies and defenses that commonly arise in commercial construction engagements.
He keeps focused on professional development through bar section involvement and peer engagement. That work informs how he advises clients and how he frames disputes when they proceed to formal resolution. He continues to practice in Georgia and concentrates on construction law and related commercial disputes.