Wilkinson Contracting

Log Construction

Log Construction

Experience the Beauty of a Log Home

Timeless Log Homes

Log homes offer a rare combination of natural beauty, durability, and timeless craftsmanship. At Wilkinson Contracting, we bring decades of experience guiding homeowners through every step of designing and building custom log and log-style homes. Whether you are dreaming of a rustic retreat or a refined modern log home, our team is committed to delivering a home that reflects your lifestyle, vision, and appreciation for quality construction.

Experience

Richard Wilkinson has extensive background in all aspects of helping homeowners design and build the custom log home or log cabin they’ve always envisioned. His long-standing relationships with a variety of log home manufacturers ensure access to high-quality materials and expertly engineered systems.

From selecting the right corner styles and rooflines to choosing between handcrafted, milled, or hybrid construction methods, Richard guides clients through every decision. Whether you plan to build your own log home or want full design-build services, Wilkinson Contracting helps you find the right path and the right partners to bring your home to life.

The home shown in the right is an example of a Wilkinson project once featured in a magazine. Read it here.

How Do You Want Your Home to Look?

Your home may be created from D-logs, square logs or round logs. It may be chinked or not. The corners can be dovetailed, butt-and-pass or Swedish cope. It can be stained/sealed with a color or tent or sealed in the natural color of the wood.

The roof can be of trusses or can be a heavy timber system with exposed beams and tongue-and-groove. Roof systems can incorporate heavy timber construction with exposed beams, tongue-and-groove ceilings, and dramatic architectural details. With Richard’s experience in custom manufactured log homes, these choices become clear early in the process allowing your home to take shape efficiently and beautifully.

With Richard’s experience in building custom manufactured log homes, these choices will be clear, and your home will soon be underway.

Endless Design, Material, and Finish Choices

There are countless ways to personalize a log home. From exterior railings and porches to interior finishes and trim details, log homes offer flexibility that surprises many homeowners.

Wilkinson Contracting works closely with clients to explore design options, materials, and finishes that complement the natural character of log construction while meeting modern expectations for comfort and function.

Interior Craftsmanship That Feels Like Home

Inside a log home, warmth and character take center stage. Exposed log walls, handcrafted staircases, and natural wood finishes create inviting spaces that feel both cozy and substantial.

Nearly any material or design feature you can imagine can be incorporated into your log home. By involving Wilkinson Contracting early in the planning and design phase, these interior details are carefully coordinated to enhance flow, function, and long-term livability.

Built for Comfort and Longevity

Log homes are more than visually striking they are designed to perform. The natural thermal mass of logs helps regulate interior temperatures, contributing to energy efficiency and year-round comfort.

With proper design and construction, log homes provide quiet interiors, durable structures, and an unmatched connection to nature making them ideal for both primary residences and getaway retreats.

Almost any materials you can imagine can be incorporated into your log home. Just ask Richard during the planning and design stage.

Log Home Restoration and Renovation

If you have an existing log home you want to expand, Richard will help you accomplish this.

He will work hard to make your addition blend seamlessly into your exsiting structure, whether your addition uses logs, SIP, timber frame or traditional construcgtion methods.

If you are the proud owner of an historic log home that needs restoration and perhaps an expansion, Richard can help with that, too.

Don’t dismiss the chance to live in a beautiful, cozy and durable log home just because other contractors may be afraid to tackle the building process. We are completely prepared for addressing your needs.

Historic log cabins can also be restored, expanded, and preserved for modern living. Our team is fully prepared to address the unique challenges of log home renovations—delivering durable, beautiful results without compromising character.

11 Reasons You Are Right To Want a Log Home

Courtesy of the Log and Timber Home Council, NAHB.

1) Trees Grow Back

When a home is made from solid logs, you are effectively taking the carbon contained in those logs out of environmental circulation over the entire life of the home. Eastern White Pine, which is used in the manufacturing of many log homes, is a major species for reforestation, making it a plentiful and renewable resource.

2) They Last a LONG Time

If there’s any question about the durability of log and timber structures, some still in use today in Europe and Russia have been standing almost a millennium.

3) They’re Not Scared of Mother Nature

The log and timber home industry has countless stories of these homes surviving the worst Mother Nature deliver.

4) They’re a Natural Fit

Since this organic building material comes from nature, the resulting structures blend into the topography, naturally integrating right into the landscape rather than being awkwardly imposed onto it.

5) You’re in Your Home Faster

If you choose to use a precut and pre-drilled log system or a handcrafted home, the shell of your home can be framed on site faster than conventional stick framing, which will reduce the likelihood of weather-related damages or mold and mildew issues. With the right crew, like Wilkinson Contracting, and building system, it can be weather-tight in as little as two weeks for an average sized home. In conventional construction, your home is exposed to the elements for far longer, which could lead to mold issues within framing of the home where it can thrive undetected for years.

6) You Can Relax

Log homes are often quieter than stick built homes, thanks to the same thermal mass that provides energy efficiency and the sound deadening effects of wood walls.

7) Wood is Warm and Energy Efficient

The thermal mass of logs helps keep inside temperatures of homes comfortable in all seasons, allowing log walls to collect and store energy, then radiate it back into the home. Provided the home is sealed properly, you can have a super energy efficient home, saving 15 to 20 percent more energy efficient than a conventional home over a lifetime.

8) Little Things Matter

Hanging a picture in a home with drywall is a big ordeal, involving a stud finder, a hammer or drill and bruised fingers. Homeowners report the simplicity of hanging a picture is one the simple joys of living in a log and timber home.

9) You Can Have Rustic and High Tech

While rugged is appealing, roughing it is not. That’s why today’s log and timber homeowners increasingly want a hideaway that’s connected, automated and secure. Many log and timber homeowners are adding backup generators (in case of power outages), a security system and a wiring system that can accommodate high-speed video, voice and data.

10) You Stay Ahead of Problems

If you’re worried about mold, mildew or insect infestation, then a log and timber home offers clear advantages since you’ll be able to see anything untoward just by taking a stroll around your home and visually inspecting the logs. This quick detection leads to a less costly remedy. In contrast to a conventional home, the sealed wall cavities can be a hidden refuge for mold, mildew and insect infestation, which can cause far more damage before it’s detected.

11) The Craftmanship is Obvious

Conventional custom homes can have their fare share of beautiful carpentry, but this is typically limited to trim and millwork. In log and timber homes, examples of fine craftsmanship are at every turn, in the handcrafted staircase with its branch-like spindles and balustrade, in the hand-scribed large timbers overhead in the cathedral ceiling, in the one-of-a-kind light fixtures.

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