Timber Frame Construction Archives | Carolina Timberworks Craftsmanship. Passion. Service. Fri, 26 Sep 2025 13:29:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://www.carolinatimberworks.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/cropped-CTLogoTag_1545C_5747C-32x32.png Timber Frame Construction Archives | Carolina Timberworks 32 32 Timber Traditions: Our Industry Customs https://www.carolinatimberworks.com/timber-framing-traditions/ Wed, 09 Nov 2016 22:13:34 +0000 http://www.carolinatimberworks.com/?p=2423 Timber framing has been around, in some form or another, for over 2,000 years. So it stands to reason, some interesting timber framing traditions and customs have sprung up in connection with timber frame construction. We thought we’d share some of the more interesting ones… What Are Some Common Timber Frame Traditions? Topping Out Ceremony and […]

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Timber framing has been around, in some form or another, for over 2,000 years. So it stands to reason, some interesting timber framing traditions and customs have sprung up in connection with timber frame construction. We thought we’d share some of the more interesting ones…

What Are Some Common Timber Frame Traditions?

Topping Out Ceremony and the Wetting Bush

Timber framing traditions topping out ceremony

One of the more well-known timber traditions involves nailing a bough or small evergreen tree to the highest point of the timber frame.  According to Fine Homebuilding Magazine,

The ritual serves two purposes. One pays homage to all the trees that went into the construction of the house, and to the many hands that built it.  The other symbolizes the establishment of the house’s roots, which will nourish a long and prosperous life.  The young tree is called a “wetting bush”, likely derived from the German tradition of watering it as a sign of the home’s first nourishment.

So, who gets to set the wetting bush?  The youngest carpenter present.

The Barn Raising

grandma moses barn raising

Of course, this might refer to a home, an outbuilding, or even a post and beam shed, but Barn Raising evokes an image familiar to most of us–a community coming together to accomplish something big.

In the “olden days” the individual timbers for a house or barn would be cut and fitted by just a few men or a family. When all the individual walls were ready, the whole community would come together to raise the walls into position and set the rafters and ridge beam in place. This would be done using gin poles, ropes and pulleys, and of course, strong men. Although hard physical labor was required, “many hands make light work”, and the day ended with a celebration and party. The wives and children participated and a feast was held. There’s a real nostalgia in the thought of honest labor and participation in a feat that none of the individuals could have accomplished alone.

The Group Photo

timber frame barn raising

This doesn’t happen when the sheetrock goes up…but once the last timber is raised and pegged, the moment is documented with a photograph.  Why?  Perhaps because timber framers often feel that the timber frame will never be more beautiful than at that moment (before it is covered by walls and a roof), perhaps because all present sense that this structure will outlast every one in the picture.

Feeding the Framers

Whether it’s a tradition, or simply good manners, timber framers always appreciate a hearty meal! So they perpetuate the superstition that feeding the crew will bring the building (and Owners) good luck…

Slaking the Framers’ Thirst

A French tradition, courtesy of Charpentiers Sans Frontières (Carpenters Without Borders), is to give the lady of the house the honor of pounding in the last peg.  She is expected to owe the crew one drink for every blow of the mallet required to drive the peg home.

Timber frame client pounding in peg

Using a Coin to Date the Building

placing a coin under a post

Think of this as a very abbreviated time capsule! A coin minted the same year as the structure is built is placed under a post, where it (presumably) will not be found until the building is dismantled (and hopefully the timber frame reclaimed).

Carving the Date

carving the date into a beam

The date of completion is carved into the frame. This may be done in a visible and conspicuous place, such as over a doorway, but it might also be done in a less obvious spot.  For example, some timber frame companies carve the date in the location on the frame closest to where the home shop is located. In our case, the date would be carved on the side of the building closest to West Jefferson, North Carolina.

Signing the Frame

craftsmen signing work

All the timber frame craftsmen (and craftswomen) who worked on the frame sign one of the timbers in a hidden place where it may lie undiscovered for a century or more.

Topping Out in Space

topping out ceremony

One of our clients worked for NASA and sent a photograph of Mission Specialist Joe Tanner topping out the International Space Station.  The evergreen tree represents the highest point (top of the P-6  integrated truss structure) of the ISS.

Learn More: Our Timber Frame Glossary

See timber framing like you’ve never seen it before

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timber framing traditions topping out ceremony grandma moses barn raising timber-frame-barn-raising Timber frame client pounding in last peg placing a coin under a post carving-the-date-into-a-beam craftsmen-signing-their-work NASA topping out the ISS
Why Do Timbers Split and Crack? https://www.carolinatimberworks.com/why-do-timbers-split-and-crack/ Thu, 23 Jun 2016 16:20:55 +0000 http://www.carolinatimberworks.com/?p=2227 Eric Morley on why timbers split and crack, how long it takes timber to dry, where to get dry timbers, and why gunshots in the night are nothing to be afraid of when you understand wood checking and splitting. Wood checking and splitting, a natural phenomenon in timber, occurs as the wood dries and loses […]

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Eric Morley on why timbers split and crack, how long it takes timber to dry, where to get dry timbers, and why gunshots in the night are nothing to be afraid of when you understand wood checking and splitting.

Wood checking and splitting, a natural phenomenon in timber, occurs as the wood dries and loses moisture. This process leads to split wood and cracked wood, known as “checks.” While they do alter the appearance of the timber, checks also add unique character without affecting the wood’s structural integrity.

What Causes Wood to Crack?

Drying Does!

Splits and cracks (known as wood checks in the industry) occur when wood shrinks as it dries. Wood shrinks roughly twice as much along with the growth rings (radially) as it does across the rings (tangentially). It is this uneven shrinkage that causes checks to develop.

Douglas Fir Timber Checks cracks splits

Is Wood Checking Bad?

Here at Carolina Timberworks, we think of them as wrinkles in a cotton shirt. It proves the timber is real. Checks are what make a solid timber look different from a boxed beam. Look at the reclaimed timber below. It is impossible to predict where a check will appear in timber. It is the check that gives this reclaimed white oak timber so much of its character and a big part of what makes it completely unique and different from any other beam in the world.

Timber cracks (checks) in Reclaimed Wood Timber

Ever Heard the Song of the Wood?

Have you ever taken a hot loaf of artisan bread out of the oven, and put your ear to it? If you do, you’ll hear the song of the bread–pops and crackles as the crust shrinks, cracks, and dries.

Walk into a timber framer’s shop one winter evening when everyone has gone home for the day. Throw another log into the woodstove, and listen carefully. If there are green (wet) timbers arrayed on sawhorses, within a few minutes, you’re likely to hear the song of the wood – a symphony of pops and cracks as wood checking occurs.

If one night, asleep in your new home, you’re awoken by a loud crack a little like a gunshot. Don’t worry.  Roll over and go back to sleep. It’s just your timbers singing to you. That’s wood checking in action.

cedar hammer beam truss on sawhorses

Why Does Wood Shrink?

It sometimes surprises people to learn that roughly half of a living tree’s weight is water. Let’s consider a 24’ long Douglas Fir log that measures 34” diameter at the large end and 14” at the small end as an example. This hypothetical green (wet) log would contain a little over 1 ton of water or about five 55-gallon drums of water.

Sometimes when we drive a chisel into green (wet) timber, water spurts out of the wood. Wood is hygroscopic – meaning it’s like a sponge in that it can absorb, hold and release water. When freshly cut, approximately half of a tree’s weight is water. The photograph below shows water in a freshly cut cypress timber–and how the timber is drying from the outside in.

Water in Cypress Beam

How Long Does It Take a Timber to Dry?

It’s not exactly a fast process. It depends on the humidity of the environment in which the timber is located, but a rule of thumb is that timber air dries about one inch per year.  Thus a 12” x 12” timber would take about six years to dry to the center.

How Dry Will the Timber Become?

A timber will eventually air dry to the Equilibrium Moisture Content (EMC) of its environment.  The EMC is the point at which wood is neither losing nor absorbing water.  A timber’s moisture content is determined by the atmospheric humidity of the timber’s environment.

That environment varies, of course.  Is the timber located inside, or outside?  What part of the country is it located in? What time of year is it? For example, in the dry mountain air of Denver, the outdoor EMC of wood exposed to the outdoor atmosphere in July is 9.4%, while New Orleans is 15.3% (Forest Products Laboratory:  Equilibrium Moisture Content of Wood in Outdoor Locations in the United States and Worldwide, August 1988).

How Wet (or Dry) Are My Timbers?

Since we can’t see the water in the wood, moisture meters are used to measure moisture content. Inexpensive moisture meters measure the surface moisture content which works ok for 3/4” boards, but not 8” thick timbers. Professional moisture meters use electromagnetic scanning to read the moisture in the wood, not on the surface of the beam.

wagner moisture meter measuring oak timber

What is the Average Moisture Content in the U.S.?

The majority of the U.S. has an 8% average moisture content, the Southeast and California coastal areas have an 11% average moisture content, and the Southwest desert areas are closer to 6%.

Most Timber Frames Are Built From Green (Wet) Wood

It is impractical (it takes years) to air dry timber, and timber frame customers are nothing if not impatient, so for the last two thousand years, people have been building timber frames from green (wet) timber. Yes, green timber will shrink, check, and sometimes twist as it dries, but timber framers and engineers understand and account for the movement. Checks begin on the exterior surface of the timber and almost always stop at the heart (center) of the timber, and are almost never a structural concern.

By the way, if a crack were to develop all the way through a timber (splitting timber it into two separate pieces), it would be called a split and might be cause for concern.

Learn more about timber framing all the ways timber can be used here.

white pine timber with split or woodchecking

How Much Does Green (Wet) Timber Shrink as It Dries?

Shrinkage depends on the species, but more than you may think!

Since many timber frames are built from Douglas Fir, let’s start by looking at a 12×12 Douglas Fir (Coastal) timber. This particular green (wet) Douglas Fir timber, dried to a final moisture content of 8%, would be expected to shrink a little less than 9/16” on each face from 12” x 12” to a final size of 11-7/16” x 11-7/16”.

Western Red Cedar shrinks less:  The same size timber in Western Red Cedar timber would shrink a bit less about 5/16” to 11-11/16” x 11-11/16”. Finally, how about a species with a high shrinkage rate, like White Oak? It would be expected to shrink a bit less than 3/4” to slightly larger than 11-1/4” x 11-1/4”.

6 Ways to Minimize Problems with a Green (Wet) Wood in a Timber Frame:

  1. Specify Free-Of-Heart-Center (when available) instead of the lower Boxed Heart grade.
  2. Apply a wax-based end sealer to the end grain to slow the drying process. We use Anchorseal, available at https://uccoatings.com/products/anchorseal/.
  3. Utilize housed joinery wherever possible.
  4. Drawbore pegged joints.
  5. The slower the wood cracking when drying, and the more gradual the process, the better (i.e., the worst thing you can do is enclose the timber frame and immediately turn on the heat or air conditioning full blast.)
  6. Do not apply a film-forming finish (i.e., polyurethane) to green (unseasoned) wood. 
  7. Sawing checking kerfs on an unseen timber face is a good practice and can help mitigate the visual checking. 

I Don’t Want Wood Checking or Cracks in My Timbers. What Are My Options?

Don’t build with solid timber. Instead, ask us to price glulam beams for the timber frame, or to fabricate box beams from kiln-dried new or well-dried reclaimed lumber.

If you’re ok with some checks, but would prefer to avoid some of the characteristics of green lumber, consider purchasing your timber like you do your high-quality organic cotton t-shirts–pre-shrunk. There are two ways to buy dry beams: new timber that’s been dried in a kiln, or reclaimed wood that’s dried slowly and naturally for 50 or 100 years during its previous life as a timber frame barn or warehouse.

Where to Buy Kiln Dried Timbers?

We offer two types of kiln-dried timber:  Conventionally kiln-dried (KD), and Radio Frequency Kiln Dried (RFKD).  Conventional kiln drying dries about the outer 1” or so leaving most of the timber wet. The other method, RFKD, is similar to a giant microwave and dries timber to the core.

What you need to know about RFKD timber is that it currently works only on Douglas Fir, it is dry to the core, and it is more expensive. It is, however, not as dry as conventionally kiln-dried hardwood flooring or lumber (6-8% moisture content). For example the driest grade of RFKD timber measures 15% or less moisture content 3” in from the surface of the timber.

What About Using Reclaimed Wood in Timber Frame Construction?

Reclaimed wood beams that have naturally air-dried for 50-100 years during their previous life as a barn, factory, or warehouse are often completely dry to the core and the driest timbers available anywhere. It’s not easy to hand-scribe and connects irregular, twisted, and non-square reclaimed beams so the finished timber frame appears to have always been one frame.

We think a timber frame built from reclaimed wood is everything that today’s sleek, mass-produced, technology-saturated culture isn’t. It celebrates the cracks and character and dirt and all the other marks that time, weather, and use leave behind.

Reclaimed Wood timber frame great room highlands nc

Interested in learning more about timber framing? Check out our timber frame blog.

Curious how timber frames come together? Watch and learn

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Douglas Fir Timber Checking Timber cracks (checks) in Reclaimed Wood Timber cedar hammer beam truss on sawhorses Water in Cypress Beam Wagner moisture meter on Oak Timber Eastern White Pine Timber Check Checking kerf in solid timber Reclaimed Wood timber frame great room highlands nc version 2
How to Figure Out a Timber Frame Budget https://www.carolinatimberworks.com/how-to-fit-timber-framing-into-the-budget/ Wed, 23 Sep 2015 19:33:17 +0000 http://www.carolinatimberworks.com/?p=1505 Champagne timber framing on a (craft) beer budget After receiving the latest Carolina Timberworks newsletter, a potential client emailed a great question:  “Can you show a recent home for a customer on a 300k budget, else this stuff is non-realistic to normal non-millionaire folks“. My Emailed Reply About a Timber Frame Budget With respect to non-millionaire projects, […]

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Champagne timber framing on a (craft) beer budget

Eric Morley co-owner of Carolina TimberworksAfter receiving the latest Carolina Timberworks newsletter, a potential client emailed a great question:  “Can you show a recent home for a customer on a 300k budget, else this stuff is non-realistic to normal non-millionaire folks“.

My Emailed Reply About a Timber Frame Budget

With respect to non-millionaire projects, we do a lot of them in North Carolina and around the United States. One way to fit timber framing into the budget is to consider hybrid timber framing — i.e. timber frame only certain parts of the house as opposed to building a timber frame house. You might consider identifying an area or two within your plan that you might like to timber frame (for example the front entry and great room) and establish a budget. Then, give us a call and we’ll do our best to come up with something great that fits your budget. By the way, if the timber framing is structural (versus decorative) there is some cost offset savings to be realized (since the timber framing is replacing 2x conventional construction).

Admittedly, timber framing is more expensive than conventional construction, but it’s also for us non-millionaire folks. I have a timber framed heavy duty mailbox with post, one curved timber bracket at my front entry, and a timber framed garage/guesthouse.

Finally, you can design, cut, and raise the timber frame yourself.  It’s a heavy lift (pun intended), but your ancestors probably did it, and people today find it highly rewarding.  By the way, there are wonderful schools that teach introductory timber framing (Heartwood in MA, and Yestermorrow in VT).   

A More Considered Reply on Timber Frame Cost

Most of the timber frames Carolina Timberworks builds are for architect-designed homes — so to be clear, we do not design timber frame homes. My personal design philosophy has been shaped by the architect-designed timber frames we’ve been involved with, as well as two books:

Sarah Susanka’s design philosophy might be summarized as follows: Keep your budget as is, but design a smaller home with less square footage. Spend the cost savings on great design, quality materials, and craftsmanship.

Eric Morley and Sarah Susanka
Eric Morley and Sarah Susanka

Suppose you want to budget for some timber framing in your home, have a smaller home design in hand, and have already chosen which areas of your home to timber frame. Here are some factors under your control that will determine how much your timber frame construction costs:

  1. The timber frame design itself. The simpler the timber frame design, the less expensive it will be.
  2. Your timber choices are varied, and certain timber species are less expensive than others.
  3. Within a given timber species, sometimes a lower grade is available that will produce a serviceable yet still beautiful (and less expensive) timber frame.
  4. Reducing timber sizes. If structurally feasible (here’s where quality timber frame engineering pays for itself), these savings can add up fast. For example, an 8×8 post has 36% less wood than a 10×10 post.
  5. The Golden Triangle applies to timber framing, just as it does to other purchases.  Pick any two sides.  You can have fast and cheap (but mediocre), good and cheap (but slow), or fast and good (but not cheap).  You can’t have all three.  

Please select only 2 out of 3

Need Some Ideas About Designing a Smaller Home So You Can Fit Timber Framing Into the Budget?

Since we don’t design homes, it was timely that Brice Cochran of Timber Frame HQ recently sent me some good advice on the topic.

Planning is the First Step

Whether you’re buying your first starter home, downsizing after the kids have flown the coop, or are financially limited to a smaller timber frame home, planning the most practical way to use your space can make that house seem more spacious.

It’s great when you can have a room for each of your family’s activities, but it usually isn’t feasible. By thinking ahead, planning your space, and getting creative, you can come up with a solution that gives everyone in the family the space they need for various hobbies and activities.

Consider the Things You Want to Do

Of course, you could make a laundry list of dozens of things you’d like to do in your home, and those may be good for your bucket list. However, think seriously about your family’s lifestyle options. What hobbies do your family get involved with and what responsibilities do family members have that require special space?

Be realistic about your needs, now and in the future. Make contingency plans and put future expansion and remodeling ideas into your design. If you envision a future addition, make sure you have the space on your property for it. Make sure there is easy access to add electrical, HVAC, and plumbing to the room when the time comes.

Rethink the Size of Rooms

It’s become very popular to have huge master bedroom suites and oversized spa bathrooms. It sounds cool to think of having a private getaway in your bedroom with plenty of space for a desk, a comfortable chair, or even an exercise machine. In addition, that spa bathroom that’s big enough for the whole family to use at once might seem glamorous, but when you’re planning a modest home, these two rooms may need some rethinking. The extra square footage you gain when you scale down those oversized rooms can go a long way to giving other smaller rooms the space they need to become roomy multi-purpose rooms the entire family can enjoy.

Hallways are a big waste of space. Plan your home to have the smallest square footage of the hallway as possible and use the extra space to enlarge other rooms.

Repurpose Spaces

If you never use your formal dining room and have ample space in your kitchen or family room, repurpose it as an office, hobby room, or exercise room. You don’t need a huge laundry room. In designing your home, consider using a closet for your washer and dryer.

Consider creating a centralized all-in-one space that includes your HVAC, plumbing system, storage, and laundry area. This compact use of space frees up valuable real estate for expanding smaller rooms.

Choose Furniture That Does Double Duty

Think further than a hide-a-bed when you’re considering furniture that can multitask. Of course, a convertible sofa is a good answer for a guest room that doubles as an office or study. There are lots of furniture options that make changing the role of your room easy and look great.

Certainly not cheap, but a great space saver for a guest room is a Murphy bed. These units have been around for years and today’s models are sleek and stylish. An adjustable height coffee table that rises to become a worktable or eating space is a perfect space-saving option for a desk or craft table in a study.

If you don’t have room for a desk, there are fold-down wall-mounted units that hide beneath an art print or mirror surface when it’s stowed away.

A long counter with base cabinets can be used as a desk or work area with plenty of storage space. This area can double as an entertainment area in a family room.

There’s a wide variety of furniture that incorporates storage into the base. Benches, footstools, low chests all are available with built-in storage space. Under-bed storage options vary from off-season clothing storage to a child’s toy storage and play surface to a pull-out trundle bed. Expandable tables are popular for feeding a crown or as a roomy work table.

Make Use of Lost Space

You may have some wasted space that can be converted to useful living space. The area beneath the stairs can serve a number of purposes. Open up space and create a compact workspace with a built-in desk and shelves. Another option is to create a storage space with a closet or a wall filled with drawers. Depending on its location, it could become a cozy reading nook, wet bar, or a diminutive powder room.

Space under the eaves can be fitted out with drawers for built-in storage, or if there’s enough headroom, lay down sturdy flooring and use it for long-term storage.

The most overlooked and underused space in most homes is the vertical wall space. Shelving can be installed around doors, above and adjacent to windows, in a wide hallway, and can reach to the ceiling. With all the added storage that doesn’t take up floor space, you can minimize bulky furniture like dressers and cabinets. You’ve opened up the room to accommodate the things you need for your multi-purpose plans.

Spend time planning how you’ll realistically use your home and develop a strategy to make the most of your home’s square footage. You may be surprised at how much you can do with the space you have.

Finally, you might enjoy this article about the low cost of quality: https://www.carolinatimberworks.com/a-return-to-quality/

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Eric Morley co-owner of Carolina Timberworks Eric Morley and Sarah Susanka Please select only 2 out of 3
The Benefits of Timber Framing https://www.carolinatimberworks.com/benefits-of-timber-framing/ Mon, 27 Jul 2015 17:04:25 +0000 http://www.carolinatimberworks.com/?p=1379 When you design a new home or modify your existing space, deciding on a building method is one of the first—and most important—choices you’ll have to make. If you’d rather avoid the standardized look of conventional construction, then the handcrafted aesthetic, the gorgeous exposed beams, and the open floor plans synonymous with timber framing may […]

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When you design a new home or modify your existing space, deciding on a building method is one of the first—and most important—choices you’ll have to make. If you’d rather avoid the standardized look of conventional construction, then the handcrafted aesthetic, the gorgeous exposed beams, and the open floor plans synonymous with timber framing may have caught your eye.

But is this method of building really the right choice for your home or family? What are the advantages of timber framing—and are there downsides you should know about?

At Carolina Timberworks, our team has collectively had more than 90 years to ponder these questions. Here’s what we think, based on our first-hand experience with building and customizing timber frame homes.

What Are the Benefits of Timber Framing?

We can think of quite a few:

It’s an Art

While watching Fine Homebuilding’s video of architect Caleb Johnson of Biddeford, Maine, discuss the winner of the 2015 Best New Home award, we were struck by his profound insights into timber frame benefits. His words beautifully capture why we’re drawn to and love timber framing: “Built poetry.“

“The materials go together in a fashion that you can tell he (architect Louis Kahn) cared deeply about the nature of those materials and the way they came together on a level that’s art–not just construction.“ It’s true: we’ve found that timber framing is much more than a building method. It’s an art.

It Gets Better With Age

As Caleb Johnson says, “If we use natural materials, as time goes on, these natural materials take on a character and patina that enhances the building. Whereas when you use manufactured materials, those materials will look best the day you put them in, and they will deteriorate from there, and there’s really nothing you can do to bring them back.“

Building a timber frame home requires heavy timber and wood joinery, which is about as natural as it gets. What does that mean for your family? You can expect your timber frame home’s aesthetic to continue to evolve and develop a character of its own over time. In other words, it gets better with age.

It’s Sustainable

From the new wood to the concrete and steel, stick-built homes are often the opposite of sustainable. Conventional construction generally uses highly embodied resources that produce extensive carbon emissions and younger trees that never get to realize their potential as a carbon sink.

In contrast, timber framing tends to be much more sustainable. What do we mean when we say timber framing is sustainable? This short comic says it all:

Carolina Timberworks - sustainability comic 1
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Carolina Timberworks - sustainability comic 5

It’s an Experience

A timber frame structure doesn’t typically require load-bearing walls. That means a timber frame home can often support (literally!) open floor plans that go beyond what conventional construction could create.

But that’s not all. As Caleb Johnson says, “I feel that the structure of a house can be the most expressive part of the architecture and I feel that when that structure is exposed, it’s most powerful when it’s authentic–like it’s actually bearing the load of gravity pulling the house down and the winds trying to push the house over.“ In other words, let’s just say living in a timber frame home is quite an experience.

Are There Any Disadvantages to Timber Framing?

Any timber frame company that tells you there are no downsides isn’t telling you the whole story. Most importantly, you should know that timber framing tends to cost more than conventional construction for a variety of reasons, including the engineering, the highly skilled labor, and the high-quality wood. Even if you opt for a timber frame home kit, you can expect it to be more expensive than a stick-built house—especially if you intend to modify the plans dramatically.

Can you cut the costs? Sure, there are a few ways to make timber framing less expensive. From careful planning to rethinking room size to repurposing space creatively, we have several suggestions for how to fit timber framing into your budget.

Need help understanding timber framing terms? Browse our Timber Frame Glossary for easy-to-understand explanations of the basics.

Should You Build a Timber Frame Home?

It may come as no surprise that at Carolina Timberworks, we think there’s nothing better than a timber frame structure. But a timber frame house certainly isn’t the right choice for everyone. So how can you decide? Take a look at our timber frame portfolio to see our work in action or contact us to talk about your project. We’re nice!

Special thanks to Shannon Richards of Caleb Johnson Architects for permitting us to reproduce Caleb’s words.

Want to see what timber framing is all about?

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Carolina Timberworks – sustainability comic 1 Carolina Timberworks – sustainability comic 2 Carolina Timberworks – sustainability comic 3 Carolina Timberworks – sustainability comic 4 Carolina Timberworks – sustainability comic 5
Timber Frame Treehouse https://www.carolinatimberworks.com/timber-frame-tree-house/ Mon, 13 Jul 2015 16:08:42 +0000 http://www.carolinatimberworks.com/?p=1336 Search for “problems with tree houses” and Google will serve up 37,100,000 results:  it’s impossible not to harm the trees, trees grow over time, trees die, there aren’t the right trees where you’d really like to have a tree house… Our take on the tree house solves these problems.   Carolina Timberworks’ two and a half […]

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Eric Morley co-owner of Carolina TimberworksSearch for “problems with tree houses” and Google will serve up 37,100,000 results:  it’s impossible not to harm the trees, trees grow over time, trees die, there aren’t the right trees where you’d really like to have a tree house…

Our take on the tree house solves these problems.   Carolina Timberworks’ two and a half story Timber Frame Tree House Tower is an engineered and architecturally designed kit that doesn’t rely on trees for support.  This allows you to site your tree house on the best spot on your property instead of being limited to where the right trees are.  No trees?  No problem.  Ever wanted to spend an afternoon hanging out in a fire tower gazing out over the forest and valleys? Got an amazing view if only you were 25’ higher?  Brilliant, right?

Want to learn more?  Here’s a link to our timber frame tower kit.

These timber frames don’t just offer shelter, they tell stories

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Eric Morley co-owner of Carolina Timberworks
Build a Party Barn! https://www.carolinatimberworks.com/build-a-party-barn/ Fri, 19 Jun 2015 00:00:32 +0000 http://www.carolinatimberworks.com/?p=1245 A timber frame barn can be much more than a space for animals or equipment storage. Thanks to their honest aesthetic and open space, these structures are gaining popularity as party barns and entertainment venues. What Are Timber Frame Party Barns? A party barn is a timber frame structure that looks like a traditional barn—but […]

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A timber frame barn can be much more than a space for animals or equipment storage. Thanks to their honest aesthetic and open space, these structures are gaining popularity as party barns and entertainment venues.

What Are Timber Frame Party Barns?

A party barn is a timber frame structure that looks like a traditional barn—but can easily transform into a space for gathering or entertaining. As a timber frame structure, it has all the essential elements of this type of construction, including exposed heavy timbers, wood-to-wood joinery, and plenty of open interior space.

What Else Can You Do With a Party Barn?

Timber frame party barns are multipurpose buildings. Here are a few party barn ideas:

  • Wedding Venue: No matter the size of your wedding, party barns can set the scene for a grand experience or an intimate affair.
  • Family Gatherings: Thanks to their cozy feel, party barns also work well as family gathering spaces for anything from a birthday party to a baby shower to a graduation celebration.
  • Yoga Classes: With all that open space, party barns are great for meditative, low-impact movement like yoga.
  • Car Barn: It might be a good time to invest in iconic vintage cars and trucks. For a long time the auto industry said that electric cars wouldn’t work, couldn’t achieve the range and performance, and even if they did, nobody would buy them. Although reports of the demise of the internal combustion engine may be exaggerated, increasing global wealth means there’s more money chasing a finite number of classic vehicles. Once you’ve begun acquiring your collection of classics, a heavy-timbered car barn is (we think) the most beautiful way to showcase and protect your collection. Finally, the sound of a high performance engine echoing in the rafters of a heavy-timbered barn is a welcome antidote to today’s digital world (and commutes are a lot more fun).
  • Man Cave: Whether you place it on the main floor or on an upper level of a party barn, a man cave can be the ideal spot for watching the game or relaxing with friends.
  • Rental Space: Not sure how often you’d use a party barn? You might consider renting it as an event venue so others can enjoy the space too.

How Does Carolina Timberworks Approach Party Barn Projects?

Whether it’s the cathedral-like atmosphere or the honesty of the structure, barns seem to resonate with people. Case in point:

“Buy it.” I asked Jim Becher to repeat what he’d just told me. Then I had to admit we didn’t have enough money in our checking account to buy the antique timber frame barn in Pennsylvania I’d been telling him about. “You’ll have a check by FedEx tomorrow morning.” He told me he was looking forward to working with us and hung up.

My next call was to the architect (Jim Meyer of Meyer Greesen Paullin Benson) to ask if he thought Mr. Becher was serious. After Jim Meyer assured me I didn’t need to worry about Jim Becher’s word, my third call was to my Mennonite friend in Pennsylvania, who that morning had emailed me photos of a spectacular antique hand-hewn Oak timber frame barn he was reclaiming. I told him we had a client who wanted to purchase the timber frame barn and build a party barn on his farm.

So began our involvement with Jim and Betty Becher’s fast track project to convert their existing cattle barn into a party barn. Betty and Jim’s inspiration to build a party barn came from a visit to Blackberry Farm in Tennessee, and the fast track part of the project came from Betty’s approaching birthday party deadline.

Build a Party Barn

The first thing we needed to do was get the 200-year-old Pennsylvania barn to our timber frame shop. The reason? We needed to know if it contained enough timber in the right sizes and lengths to build what the architect had designed for the space. It turned out that there wasn’t enough long timber in the first centuries-old timber antique barn, so we acquired a second post and beam barn – this one a few miles outside Gettysburg. Here’s what the first barn looked like during dismantling:

To fully appreciate this project and the party barn plans that go with it, it helps to know that it was completed from start to finish in four and a half months. Here are the before pictures:

Jim Becher’s emailed comments after we finished:

“Your crew to the man was fantastic in every respect. Eric is a gentleman in every respect and what a talent and fine representative of Carolina Timberworks. Thanks for a great job and experience.”

Located on over 700 acres in the rolling mountains of Alleghany County in western North Carolina, Bittersweet Farms is home to over 300 head of black Angus and black Belted Galloway cattle.

New Jersey Party Barn

Don’t have an existing working cattle barn on your property to renovate? Build a new party barn either using a relocated antique post and beam barn or use new timbers and build a party barn like this one. Brandes Maselli Architects selected Carolina Timberworks to fabricate and erect the timber frame for a new Party Barn located on a golf course in Bedminster, NJ.

To keep the cost of building a party barn down, new rough-sawn Douglas Fir was chosen for the timber frame. It’s not easy to replicate the patina of time and weather-worn barn timber. At first glance, a piece of antique timber looks gray. A closer inspection will reveal subtle brown, black, and silver shades. We’ve seen new timber faux finishes in an attempt to duplicate the look of aged timber, but it often falls short of the mark (good from afar, but far from good). However, the finish that Michael Brandes’ painting subcontractor applied to these new timbers is, in our opinion, quite authentic.

Three years later, it was decided that the party barn needed a silo. We built the timber framed domed silo roof from Douglas Fir reclaimed from the San Diego and Arizona Eastern Railway, better known as “The Impossible Railroad.” Built between 1907 – 1919, the construction of this 146-mile long railroad from San Diego to El Centro to the east overcame a series of catastrophes and misfortunes including, but not limited to, the Mexican Revolution, a prolonged legal battle, floods, World War I, labor shortages, tunnel collapses, and a pandemic thrown in for good measure.

North Carolina Mountains Party Barn

Upon seeing the photographs of these party barns, a friend of mine exclaimed, “Everybody should have a party barn!”

Want to learn more about the timber elements that make this barn unique? Check out our Timber Frame Glossary for insights into key framing terms.

How Do You Build a Timber Frame Party Barn?

There’s something wonderful about breathing new life into an old structure, especially when you transform it into a space that’s bustling with happy experiences and memorable gatherings. Are you curious about how to get started with a party barn project? Learn more about our building process and how we approach timber frame construction.

Read More: Timber Frame Barn Homes

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Build a Party Barn
Is Timber Framing Sustainable? https://www.carolinatimberworks.com/is-timber-framing-sustainable/ Fri, 15 May 2015 18:49:07 +0000 http://www.carolinatimberworks.com/?p=582 Wood is the world’s most environmentally-friendly building material. Timber framing is one of the best ways to conserve our resources because post and beam homes are special places that people love, and because they are loved, they are maintained over the years, and because of that care, post and beam homes last for centuries rather […]

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Wood is the world’s most environmentally-friendly building material.

Timber framing is one of the best ways to conserve our resources because post and beam homes are special places that people love, and because they are loved, they are maintained over the years, and because of that care, post and beam homes last for centuries rather than decades. Buildings that are loved get maintained, and well-maintained buildings last far longer.

Why is Timber Framing Sustainable?

  • Wood is one of our only renewable resources. Think about this sometimes overlooked and obvious fact.
  • Timber is a natural product. Is timber sustainable? Yes! It is recyclable, biodegradable, and renewable. It does not off-gas toxins because there are none.

Timber, unlike 2×4 and 2×6 lumber, upon the end of the useful life of the timber frame or post and beam home, will be carefully dismantled and reused. Used 2x4s may one day be reused, but today are going into landfills, rotting, and releasing their stored carbon into the atmosphere.

Wood is a carbon sink. If kept dry, wood lasts indefinitely. If you leave a tree in the forest to die a natural death, it will rot and release its stored carbon. If you cut down a tree at the end of its natural life, it has spent years storing carbon and producing oxygen. If you then fabricate it into a timber frame, and keep it dry for centuries, the post and beam home is acting as a long-term carbon storage unit.

post and beam homes

Post and beam homes can, and often do, use less wood than stick-built homes. The figure we’ve heard is around 30% less. There are some caveats here, and it may seem counter-intuitive at first, but take a look at the photo (at left)  from Stewart Elliot of Riverbend Timber framing.

Timber frame homes use big timbers which come from big trees. Here’s another counter-intuitive one. Big timbers come from big trees–sometimes old-growth trees. Big trees have spent many, many years storing carbon and producing oxygen. Today’s 2x4s are manufactured from young, small trees – trees that have not lived long enough to store much carbon or to have produced much oxygen.

What we’re doing to make 2x4s cheaply is to grow genetically-engineered super fast-growing trees, cutting them down in 10 years, and then replanting. By the way, when we replant these crop trees, we’re not doing it by hand. We’re burning diesel fuel.  Is it a cheaper way to produce a 2×4?  Undoubtedly.  Is it greener wood?  We’re not so sure.

Timber frames or post and beam homes are the best use of old trees. In our view, it is far greener to cut down a majestic old-growth Douglas Fir tree at the end of its life, and fabricate it into a functional and gorgeous timber frame that will be treasured and maintained for centuries, than to cut it down and saw it into 2x4s that will eventually go into a landfill and rot, or produce window sashes which will rot, or make paper. Better to revere these fantastic trees by turning them into an architectural solution to a structural problem that is so stunning and useful that generations of people will benefit from, and take care of the building.

Some post and beam homes are built without cutting down a single tree by using reclaimed wood and beams from old buildings and factories. Adaptive reuse is growing in popularity across the timber frame and construction industries.

Is timber framing suistanable, like in this great room?
A working cattle farm on the New River, rich in flora and fauna…a marriage of modern amenities cloaked in old reclaimed wood…while inside fine art and fine craft engage in dialogue and soliloquy.

Nearby is a photograph of one of our timber homes that utilized reclaimed wood. We love putting old wood back to work, and the sustainable timber in this project is structural and is holding up the roof.

Timber framing is a darker shade of green. Having spent a week in a photovoltaic solar class, we’d note that no building material or technology is without consequences to the environment–not even solar panels. We contend that timber frame and post and beam homes, while not an environmentally perfect building solution, are demonstrably and quantifiably greener than most other conventional building methods.

Is there progress to be made? Sure! Yet, even so, timber framing, teamed with structural insulated panels and solar photovoltaic panels, is the most beautiful, green, and energy-efficient method of building we know of.

Speaking of progress, in 2022 we installed solar panels on our new building:

Timber Frame Sustainability

Curious how timber frames come together? Watch and learn

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Post and beam homes wood usage versus stick built homes A Timber Frame Greatroom from Reclaimed Wood on the New River in VA A working cattle farm on the New River, rich in flora and fauna...a marriage of modern amenities cloaked in old reclaimed wood...while inside fine art and fine craft engage in dialogue and soliloquy. Timber Frame Sustainability
When You Buy Quality You Only Cry Once https://www.carolinatimberworks.com/when-you-buy-quality-you-only-cry-once/ Tue, 05 May 2015 18:35:59 +0000 http://www.carolinatimberworks.com/?p=574 What do the old boots have to do with building?  Please bear with me.  I bought the boots pictured at right 20 years ago.  At the time, they seemed very expensive–say $200.  My Dad and I were on a fly fishing trip, and I needed a new pair of hiking boots.  I didn’t have a […]

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timber frame quality
I bought the boots pictured above 20 years ago. At the time, they seemed expensive.

What do the old boots have to do with building?  Please bear with me.  I bought the boots pictured at right 20 years ago.  At the time, they seemed very expensive–say $200.  My Dad and I were on a fly fishing trip, and I needed a new pair of hiking boots.  I didn’t have a lot of money, (and still don’t) but I chose to buy the Italian-made boots versus a less expensive option.  Over the ensuing 20 years, I replaced the laces, and hiked a lot of miles.   Let’s calculate my cost per year as $10 ($200 / 20 years).

Now suppose I’d bought the cheapest pair for $75, and suppose they lasted 5 years before wearing out.  My cost per year would be $15 ($75 / 5 years).

Over 20 years, my cost for quality boots would be  $200 (plus laces).
Over 20 years, my cost for cheap boots would be $300 (50% more expensive).

Now, suppose we enter a period of higher than normal inflation.  If we  factor in inflation at 8.27% a year, those “cheap” boots would now cost $600 over the 20 years–three times the cost of the “expensive” choice.

My point is that quality is almost always less expensive in the long-run, and that initial price does not equal total cost.  Our clients know this.  They always pause, and nod their heads knowingly when they notice this plaque in our office:

timber frame quality
When You Buy Quality You Only Cry Once

The Swiss have a saying,  “Build it once”.

There’s another benefit to quality—you appreciate and enjoy your possessions more. Buy something serviceable but unremarkable, and it disappears. You simply don’t notice it any longer—like a battery powered clock on your wall. A family Grandfather clock is a different story. You appreciate it weekly—as you gently wind the mechanism and notice the 1878 date of manufacture and picture your father doing the same task every Sunday afternoon. Buy quality, and it becomes a friend, a loved possession.

At some point after owning something of quality for many years, you’ll shake your head in disbelief that it’s lasted so long. And here’s the funny thing—you won’t be able to remember what it cost.

This belief in quality is a big part of Sarah Susanka’s Not-So-Big-House philosophy. Design a smaller house, with higher quality design, materials & craftsmanship—to which I’d add, discipline yourself to make choices. You don’t need it all, and you’re not going to enjoy spending a big part of your life cleaning, maintaining, heating & cooling, storing, insuring and worrying about your things. Buy less things, but those you do buy, choose the best quality you can find. Choose quality over quantity and then discipline yourself to not buy or build everything you can afford. Don’t spend every dime you have or can borrow on quality. Buy only one pair of great boots, even if you can afford a second pair. Design your home so you have money left over at the end.  That way it won’t be a burden, and your children will want it (that last piece of advice comes from my Dad–an attorney who specializes in Estate Planning and Probate Law).  Follow this advice and you’ll have the time and money to experience a fuller and more meaningful life. You’ll be the one putting those boots on and going for a hike this weekend instead of the other person working Saturday and half of Sunday to make his or her mortgage payment this month.

Design your home so you have money left over at the end.

We hope to see changes to the way houses are built in America.  There’s a lot of talk about a “New Normal”, and we hope to see a “Return to Quality”.  Our grandparents believed in quality.  They paid more for something made in the USA, of good design and materials, and bought it once.  Their possessions are our prized antiques today.  We’re optimistic that these difficult times will indeed usher in a “New Normal” in building, and that more people will choose to build a high-quality timber frame, more energy efficient, smaller and sustainable homes–homes that will be loved, and taken care of for a hundred years or more.

Many people believe both inflation and higher energy costs lie ahead.  Building a somewhat smaller, meticulously designed home with high quality materials and craftsmanship that is even more energy efficient than you think is required…and that doesn’t take every dollar you have…may turn out to be one of the smartest and most enjoyable investments you can make in the coming years.

Best Regards,
Eric Morley, Founder

Ready to be blown away by timber framing craftsmanship? Watch now

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When you buy quality you only cry once-2 Danner Boots on rock with moss photo by Eric Morley When you buy quality you only cry once wooden plaque