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Cedar · Pergolas · Burlington, VT

Pergolas joined like furniture.

Free-standing or house-attached. 6×6 or 8×8 milled cedar posts. Stand-off bases. Beams notched and pinned. Rafter tails proportioned to the structure. The pergola you’ll still admire in 2050.

Registered Landscape Architect
VT licensed & insured
Featured · Garden Conservancy 2024
— Why most pergolas don’t last

A pergola is structural carpentry, not landscape carpentry.

Built without joinery, pergolas rack in the wind. Built without proper post bases, they rot at the foundation. Built with the wrong stock, they check open in their first summer.

01

Posts buried in concrete.

Water collects between the post and the cement. Rot starts six inches below grade. Five years in, the post breaks at ground level.

02

Pre-cut beam saddles instead of joints.

Galvanized hardware bolt-on connectors are fast but ugly, and they introduce a different material at the connection — moisture trap, rust streak.

03

Big-box dimensional pine stained brown.

Sold as ‘cedar tone.’ Two seasons of UV later it’s checked, splintering, and one resin coat away from the dump.

04

Beam-to-post screws, no through-bolts.

Screws hold weight but not lateral load. The first decent storm racks the structure and you find the pergola half-fallen on a Sunday morning.

— Pergolas, by the numbers
M&T
mortise-and-tenon at every primary connection. Pinned with white oak.
8″
stand-off post base height — water never wicks into the end grain.
25 yr
expected service life on a properly built pergola.
0
Simpson hardware visible. Concealed only where structurally required.
— What’s included

A pergola built like a building.

Whether free-standing or house-attached, every Cairn & Cedar pergola follows the same construction standards.

Engineered footing design

Frost-line concrete piers (48″) with stainless stand-off bases. Wind load calculated for your site.

Milled Eastern white cedar posts

6×6 for standard residential; 8×8 for spans over 12 ft. From Vermont mills, kiln-dried for stability.

Mortise-and-tenon joints

Every primary connection. White-oak peg through the joint — locks tight, looks honest.

Notched, pinned beams

Beams notched into post tops, pinned with stainless rod. No bolt-through, no surface hardware.

Proportioned rafter tails

Rafter overhang and tail profile sized to the post diameter. Visual rhythm, not just structural function.

Optional climbing wire

Stainless wire grid for clematis, climbing rose, wisteria. Tensioned through hidden eye-bolts.

Optional integrated lighting

Low-voltage LED in the rafter underside. Hidden conduit, dark-sky compliant fixtures.

— How a pergola gets built

Four steps. Six to twelve weeks.

Most pergolas install in 2–3 weeks on site once material arrives. Lead time on milled cedar runs 4–8 weeks. Total project timeline: 6–12 weeks from site visit to completion.

1

Site visit

Two-hour walk of the property with the architect. We listen, you talk. We measure light, slope, drainage, and existing material. No PowerPoint.

2

Design

Hand-drawn schematic on tracing paper, then full construction drawings — material specs, sections, footing detail. Two reviews built in.

3

Quote

Fixed-price proposal, line-itemed by trade. Stone, timber, plants, labor, equipment, drainage. You see the math. Change orders signed before any change happens.

4

Build

Our in-house crew, on site every working day. Weekly progress photos. The architect walks the site at every major milestone. We don’t leave until the punch list is empty.

— Standard pergola

10×12 to 12×16, 4-post free-standing

$14K–$32Ktypical residential

Most standard residential pergolas land $14K–$32K depending on size, height, and integration with patio. Add for climbing wire, lighting, attached canopy.

— Large or custom pergola

16×20+, attached to house, custom detail

$28K–$75Kcomplete build

Larger pergolas (over 200 sq ft canopy), attached-to-house designs, or pergolas with custom architectural detail (curved rafter tails, integrated screening, full lighting) run higher.

— Pergola questions

What clients want to know.

Free-standing or attached to the house?

Both work. Free-standing pergolas are easier — no flashing, no house structural review, more flexibility in placement. Attached pergolas integrate with the architecture, but require careful flashing detail and (often) a structural review of the house wall. We do both, about 60/40 in favor of free-standing.

How big should it be?

Comfortable for the use case. A pergola for a four-top dining set: 10×12. For a six-to-eight-person dining setup: 12×16. For an outdoor ‘living room’ configuration with seating: 14×18 or larger. We’ll sketch sizes during the site visit.

What about shade — does a pergola actually shade?

Open-rafter pergolas provide ~40% shade midday. For more shade, options include: tighter rafter spacing (60% shade), trained climbing plants on a wire grid (varies seasonally), retractable canvas canopy (90% shade), or fixed wood louvers. Most clients are happy with a climbing plant for season-three shade.

How do you keep it from rocking?

Joinery and footing depth. The mortise-and-tenon joints lock the structure into a rigid frame; the 48″ concrete footings prevent any post movement. We don’t use cross-bracing on standard residential pergolas — proper joinery and footings handle the load. For taller or more exposed sites, we’ll add invisible cross-bracing in the upper structure.

Can you remove an existing pergola and rebuild?

Often yes. We’ll evaluate the existing footings — if they’re at frost line and structurally sound, we may be able to reuse them. If not, we’ll rebuild from grade up. The new pergola is designed to fit the existing footprint within reason.

Do you handle electrical for lighting?

We rough in low-voltage conduit during the build. Final electrical hook-up is done by a licensed Vermont electrician we partner with — typically a half-day visit that we coordinate. Low-voltage transformer is mounted to the house exterior or in a small enclosure near the pergola.

— Now booking 2026 pergolas

Plan a pergola for next summer.

Pergolas install best in late spring through early fall. Lead time on milled cedar is 4–8 weeks; we order stock at quote sign-off and aim for 6–12 week total project timeline.

Schedule a site visit

Architect-led, two hours, on us.

No deposit. No obligation. Honest answer within one week.

— Ready to talk?

Plan this work for 2026.

The site visit is two hours, on us, anywhere in Chittenden County. We’ll walk the property, listen, and tell you honestly whether we’re the right firm for the work.

Schedule a site visit →