Butler Home Renovations
Butler is home — our office is at 14919 Falls Road, and this is the community we know best. The Falls Road corridor between Butler and Cockeysville runs through some of the most beautiful rural property in Baltimore County: stone farmhouses, historic mills, timber-frame barns, and estate homes set back on acreage that's been in families for generations.
These aren't suburban homes with cosmetic problems. They're properties with real architecture and real history — fieldstone walls, hand-hewn beams, slate roofs, and the kind of craftsmanship that modern production builders don't attempt. They also come with the challenges that older buildings present: rubble-core stone walls that need lime mortar, not Portland cement. Original windows that deserve restoration, not replacement. Additions that need to match the proportions and materials of structures built a century or two ago.
We understand these properties because we see them every day. Our Butler basement apartment conversion is featured in our portfolio, and we're currently working on the rehabilitation of a historic mill building on Falls Road — emergency stabilization, lime mortar repair, and careful restoration of rubble-core walls that have stood since the nineteenth century.

Our Services in Butler
Renovations
Kitchens, baths, and whole-house renovations on Butler's estate homes and farmhouses. We work alongside architects and designers to execute their vision — and our proximity means we're minutes from any jobsite in the area, not commuting from the city.
Historical Restoration & Classical Architecture
Butler's oldest properties demand a contractor who understands historic building science — lime mortar, plaster systems, timber framing, and the proportional rules that governed how these homes were built. We study the standards that preservation committees enforce because we believe in them.
Additions & New Construction
Room additions, guest cottages, carriage houses, and outbuildings that belong on the property. On rural estates, an addition that doesn't match the scale, materials, and character of the original structure stands out for all the wrong reasons. We build additions that look like they were always there.
We don't start construction until the Blueprint is complete.The Samuel Adams Standard
Ready to Discuss Your Butler Project?
Every great renovation starts with a conversation.
