Custom Homes, Built To Last For Generations
Custom homes and finish work made for Maine's Western Mountains, built with the patience of a finish carpenter and the command of a general contractor.
Most builds pass through a dozen hands. We keep ours close: designed in 3D so you can shape it with us, our own material takeoffs, and the valley's best trades on site because they want to work with us. We build for a neighbor, not a transaction, homes made to stand for generations, with our name on them long after the keys change hands.
Some of the finest
craftsmanship in the region.
Built with our crew, or run as your general contractor. Either way, held to one standard.
Custom Homes
Ground-up homes designed and built for the mountains.
View → Finished bathroom remodelAdditions & Remodels
Full gut remodels and additions, managed end to end.
View → Tile & finish detailTile & Finish
The craft it started with, showers to whole-home finishes.
View → Garage / ADUGarages & ADUs
Garages and accessory dwelling units, finished to the same standard as the house.
View →The work is the proof.
Three projects, from a ground-up custom home to the tile craft the company was built on.
A custom home, drawn and built from the ground up.
A ground-up build currently in progress, drawn, managed, and built by one builder. We're documenting every step, so you're welcome to see the level of detail that goes into each one.
View the build →A full gut remodel, taken to the studs and back.
New plumbing, insulation, a radiant heated floor, then a subway-tile surround and a warm wood vanity, documented demo to done.
View the build →A shower built around a mountain of stone.
A hand-laid pebble mosaic peak over marble-look slabs and a heated slate floor, documented start to finish, the finish work that built the reputation.
View the build →Building for a neighbor.
We're from here. Family roots in the valley go back generations, and it changes how we build, every home is for someone we'll run into for years.
A builder from away might put up hundreds of homes a year and never think of one again. We build a handful, for people who become our neighbors, and put our name on work meant to outlast us.
Read our story →Building something in the valley?
The best way to start is a phone call. Tell John about your project and get a feel for how he works.