malinoisvol
Pick up your Balls and Rattle your Cannons!
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Anybody own a log home? We are just getting started researching log home cost and livability and haven't even scratched the surface yet.
I'd love to hear your thoughts as a log home owner.
Is it worth it? Problems? What would you have done differently? Regrets?
TIA
Those danged bees, squirrels, and wood peckers would be an issue here. Didn't know that about the insurance.Looked at it, rented one for a couple of months. Too much exterior maintenance for my taste, pests (wood-burrowing) can be an issue, UV ray damage, insurance ran higher, squirrels, woodpeckers...no thank you.
Those danged bees, squirrels, and wood peckers would be an issue here. Didn't know that about the insurance.
Was it harder to heat/cool than conventional construction?
I too am looking to build a cabin to retire at some point talking to builders etc right now hope to break ground in a couple of years at the latest would love to hear all input from VN. I'm liking a plan that Stonemill out of Knoxville has right now.
I have looked at Stonemill's website. I need to do a deeper dig on them. Barna scared the hell out of me reading their reviews. LolI too am looking to build a cabin to retire at some point talking to builders etc right now hope to break ground in a couple of years at the latest would love to hear all input from VN. I'm liking a plan that Stonemill out of Knoxville has right now.
Absolutely correct!This is tricky. Wood takes on heat and releases it into the interior if you are in a sunny climate, this isn't a good thing. So many insulate the interior with drywall, etc. to control. But log homes are primarily designed for colder climates so this can be a plus. Passive solar radiation as heat can be a positive of you get the right layout (facing the appropriate direction)
Visited a log cabin show or a show that had a lot of log cabins, dunno, but the build quality really varies according to the owners who were happy to talk about their screw-ups and successes.
I enjoyed the drill-down on the details, the investigation and the study. Other mebbe not so much. Make sure whoever you choose that they air dry and season the timbers before construction to assure a snug fit.
I know a local GC that specializes in log home construction. He also travels around as a troubleshooter and fixer of bad builds. I have yet to discuss with him my ideas. So I don't feel I'm wasting his time, I will wait until I am a hard lean towards the log home adventure.
Agree with the comments about exterior maintenance and issues. We were looking at going the log cabin route but that and relative construction costs discouraged us enough to look at other options.
Since the main attraction for us is the wood interior, we are looking at timber frame construction instead.
Anyone have any experience with timber frame construction?
I too am looking to build a cabin to retire at some point talking to builders etc right now hope to break ground in a couple of years at the latest would love to hear all input from VN. I'm liking a plan that Stonemill out of Knoxville has right now.
There are at least two log cabin contractors off I26 in Asheville with modelIf you can locate the land you want to build on, you can get very precise pre-construction numbers including site prep. You can order up soil evaluations, etc - ask your GCs to reference (engineers, etc.). Point being, if you can point to a lot, or even an area, there may be a lot of historical data via permits and other sources.
If you are talking to GCs, maybe you have an area or lot you like? Do you have it under contract?
I had a neighbor that built post-beam (tframe), he went to school and got hands on cutting and shaping framing timbers. There are online courses that do a great job of explaining the basics. Here's one. Link
TF usually deals with large, open spaces, you have to come to terms how you deal with that.
Im going to quote a forum contributor and this sums up TF.
"...cutting joints requires skill and takes time. Whatever benefits you gain from having fewer pieces of wood, you lose because they are all heavier, and need to have complicated joints cut into them. Also because joints require the removal of wood so two pieces fit together, joints are the weakest part of a structure in timber frame. Another thing is timber frame is not standard construction, and requires a structural engineer to design it. "
All is true and is part of the learning process if you select any non-standard (not sticks n bricks) construction.
I love TF. Dropped my project; if I had continued, I would have focused on finding a GC first, one that has TF experience. Years of it.
If you can locate the land you want to build on, you can get very precise pre-construction numbers including site prep. You can order up soil evaluations, etc - ask your GCs to reference (engineers, etc.). Point being, if you can point to a lot, or even an area, there may be a lot of historical data via permits and other sources.
If you are talking to GCs, maybe you have an area or lot you like? Do you have it under contract?
I already own the lot. I have talked to one GC but he quoted me really high and also said he would have to remove every tree that could possibly fall on the home because of Sevier Co. codes? I need to find out more about that as I would like to keep some of the big trees.
There are at least two log cabin contractors off I26 in Asheville with model
homes. Sevierville also seems like a place that would have several of these guys.
Prob start there.
RIght now this one is speaking to meThat's a new one, codes that require tree razing? Link To Codes Pages
Call down there, don't mention the specific GC, ask them. Regardless, have GCs split open their bids, not that you will hire a GC for this, then another for that, as much as to compare. If the comparisons for say, site work and prep, are widely different, then something is amiss.
Do you have a specific set of blueprints (not blue these days lol) to work from?
two buddies of mine got an acre of land in Driggs ID in '01 for $10G. An acre in JH went for 1Mill back then. Wonder how much that is worth meow?RIght now this one is speaking to me
View attachment 291451
I have a fairly level lot, about an acre.View attachment 291452View attachment 291453