Continued (2): The quality of the whole home is top notch. No faults with Stonemill or our contractor. I'd go through Stonemill again in an instant -- easy to work with, on time, good price. I'd do more research on a gen. contractor first next time, though. One who has experience with log homes and who can price-out his work accurately.
Depends on what you're asking. For the log home portion from Stonemill it was $170k. That included all custom architecture, engineering, milling the logs, hand hewing them, shipping on 3 semi trailers from Tenn to Oregon, crane rental for 2 weeks, 5 guys from Tenn to set up and "dry in" the shell of the house and porch, and buying Kolbe & Kolbe windows from Stonemill. That was also the timberframe roof structure and and porch.
Continued: My gen. contractor was supposed to get about $200k (?) for the rest: foundation work, interior walls, plumbing, electrical, painting, etc. We did many upgrades but his price in the end was about double was his estimate was -- every month. Still a sore spot in an otherwise awesome home. He was a high-end builder and we'd looked at some of his homes and were impressed, and he came recommended by our cabinetry guy who I'm close friends with.
I must have had notifications turned off. This is in the Williams valley on Upper Powell Creek. It was a gorgeous place. Sold due to divorce a few years ago. Now it's just a big marijuana business, based on Google Earth.
randomly recommended in my feed after 11 years cool time lapse though
What an awesome looking house!!
I pulled up on site at 3:06 after a 30+hour ride from NC... I'll never forget those hours getting there... or the build...
Continued (2): The quality of the whole home is top notch. No faults with Stonemill or our contractor. I'd go through Stonemill again in an instant -- easy to work with, on time, good price. I'd do more research on a gen. contractor first next time, though. One who has experience with log homes and who can price-out his work accurately.
mbryner74 how much cost for this one
Depends on what you're asking. For the log home portion from Stonemill it was $170k. That included all custom architecture, engineering, milling the logs, hand hewing them, shipping on 3 semi trailers from Tenn to Oregon, crane rental for 2 weeks, 5 guys from Tenn to set up and "dry in" the shell of the house and porch, and buying Kolbe & Kolbe windows from Stonemill. That was also the timberframe roof structure and and porch.
can we see the house finished?? with the baranda and all that
Continued: My gen. contractor was supposed to get about $200k (?) for the rest: foundation work, interior walls, plumbing, electrical, painting, etc. We did many upgrades but his price in the end was about double was his estimate was -- every month. Still a sore spot in an otherwise awesome home. He was a high-end builder and we'd looked at some of his homes and were impressed, and he came recommended by our cabinetry guy who I'm close friends with.
Where is this? I live in Ashland we are looking to build just south of ashland
I must have had notifications turned off. This is in the Williams valley on Upper Powell Creek. It was a gorgeous place. Sold due to divorce a few years ago. Now it's just a big marijuana business, based on Google Earth.
how much was the cost? Roughly speaking of course
600k approx
Not a log home. Still looks good though.
Depends what you consider a log home. Because they are not round? The outer walls are 6x12 rectagular-cut hand-hewn logs.
@@mbryner74 My Self Reliance builds log homes. This is concrete and structural lumber and OSB with few pitiful lower timbers.
@@BlueYammer ??? The outer shell is total log construction. I'd totally use Stonemill again
你