Cedar pergolas for Essex.
Free-standing or attached cedar pergolas in Essex, Vermont — Essex Junction tight village lots and Essex Town rural acreage. Mortise-and-tenon joinery.
— Why most cedar pergolas in Essex fall short
A pergola is structural carpentry, not landscape carpentry.
We see the same patterns project after project. Here’s what goes wrong.
Posts buried in concrete.
Water collects between post and cement. Rot starts six inches below grade.
Pre-cut beam saddles instead of joints.
Hardware connectors are fast but ugly, introducing rust streaks.
Big-box dimensional pine stained brown.
Sold as ‘cedar tone.’ Two seasons of UV later it’s checked, splintering.
Beam-to-post screws, no through-bolts.
Screws hold weight but not lateral load. The first storm racks the structure.
— Cedar Pergolas, by the numbers
— What’s included
A pergola built like a building.
Whether the project is small or large, every cedar pergolas install in Essex follows the same standards.
Engineered footing
Frost-line concrete piers with stainless stand-off bases.
Milled Eastern white cedar
6×6 or 8×8 posts from Vermont mills.
Mortise-and-tenon joints
Every primary connection. White-oak peg through the joint.
Notched, pinned beams
Beams notched into post tops, pinned with stainless rod.
Proportioned rafter tails
Overhang and tail profile sized to post diameter.
Optional climbing wire
Stainless wire grid for clematis, rose, wisteria.
Optional integrated lighting
Low-voltage LED, dark-sky compliant fixtures.
— The Cairn & Cedar Method
Four steps, project-dependent timeline.
Same Method whether the project takes 6 weeks or 18 months.
Site visit
Two-hour walk with the architect. Light, slope, drainage measured. No PowerPoint.
Design
Hand-drawn schematic, then full construction documents. Two reviews.
Quote
Fixed-price proposal, line-itemed by trade. You see the math.
Build
Our in-house crew, on site every working day. Architect at every milestone.
— Recent work near Essex
Three recent projects.
Lakefront master plan, 240 ft of dry-laid wall.
Three terraced rooms framed by stone wall and cedar pavilion.
Read project →Seven dry-stone-walled terraces.
North-facing slope re-graded into seven terraced garden rooms.
Read project →Bluestone courtyard with cedar screen.
1,400 sq ft contemporary courtyard with reflecting pool.
Read project →10×12 to 12×16, free-standing
$14K–$32Ktypical install
Standard residential pergolas.
16×20+, attached, custom detail
$28K–$75Kcomplete build
Larger or attached pergolas.
— Cedar Pergolas questions
What Essex clients ask.
Free-standing or attached?
Both work. Free-standing is easier. Attached integrates with architecture but requires careful flashing.
How big?
10×12 for 4-top dining. 12×16 for 6-8 person. 14×18+ for outdoor ‘living room’ with seating.
Will it shade?
Open-rafter ~40% shade midday. More: tighter spacing, climbing plants, retractable canopy.
Wind-resistant?
Joinery and footing depth. M&T joints lock the structure rigid; 48″ concrete footings prevent post movement.
Are you near Essex?
Yes. Essex is in our daily service area from our Chittenden County shop.
Climbing plant?
Wisteria, climbing rose, clematis, grape — all work. We integrate stainless wire grids during construction.