Caroline and David Hickersonâs log-home dream may not have started with timber, but it was clearly inspired by the woodsâ45 lush acres near Virginiaâs Shenandoah National Park, to be exact.
âWe bought the land and decided to build our weekend home soon after,â says Caroline, who resides outside Washington, D.C., with David and their two teenagers. âMy husband was interested in log homes, and I looked into them and decided I liked them, too.â
The Hickersons knew their rugged, remarkable propertyâsituated on a mountainside and accessible only via gravel roadâcalled for an equally rugged and remarkable home, one that would serve as a family retreat for years to come. To make it a reality, they turned to Michigan-based Maple Island Log Homes.
âWe were set on a handcrafted home,â says Caroline, whose 4,500-square-foot masterpiece is similar to one the log provider had created for another client. âWe liked the fact that the logs arenât uniform and that theyâre hand-peeled. Theyâre very different from the milled ones.â
Eric Gordon, vice president of Maple Island Log Homes, attributes that difference to the fact that not only are the full and custom logs his company uses on its homes de-barked, peeled, scribed and notched by hand, but also the Norway pine it uses âtends to have more knot clusters, giving it more character.â
And the Hickersonsâ four-bedroom, four-bathroom home has no shortage of character. From the gorgeous 11- to 14-inch butt diameter logs used in the exterior structure to the century-old reclaimed heart-pine flooring, the space is a testament to the notion that, when given center stage, Mother Natureâs finest can shine.
Itâs something Caroline knew all along. âI wanted everything in the house to be natural,â she says. âAnd I went out of my way to do that.â
One such instance: the Michigan glacial rock in the homeâs foundation and fireplaces. Enamored of its appearance, Caroline decided that her home would include that actual stone instead of a look-alike.
âWe liked it so much that we decided to haul it in,â she says. Although doing so added a couple weeks to the 13-month project, builder Gerry Frank of CâVille Construction agrees that the idea was brilliant.
âItâs as if the log work is complementing the stonework,â he says, adding that he had to offload the weighty logs and stone in a staging area and then truck them up the mountain in small batches. âThe logs are obviously a focal point, but the stonework is almost more of a focal point.â
Thatâs the beauty of log homes: Thereâs something to be found in every crevice, at every turn. âAs you sit on the covered deck next to the fireplace, itâs easy to understand why people find this style of home so comforting,â Eric says of the Hickersonsâ place. âThere is no feeling like you get in a log home, and this one is no exception.â
Home Details
Square footage: 4,500
Log Company: Maple Island Log Homes
Builder: CâVille Construction