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How to Build a Log Cabin – 4 Different Projects

1-) Step by Step Construction of a Log Cabin by Joalex Henry

Click here for his Youtube channel.

Click here for his blog.

Click here to read more on his Instructables page.


2-) “How to Build a Log Cabin (…from Scratch and by Hand)” by The Log Cabin Hub.

The Steps Involved:

Here are the five stages of construction you will need to follow to build a log cabin;

1-) Planning Your Log Cabin
• Floor Plan and Design
• Zoning Laws/Building Codes
• Land Selection
• Costs of a Log Cabin






2-) Picking and Preparing the Logs
• Best tree species
• Log calculator
• Felling
• Debarking
• Drying

3-) Building the Foundation

4-) Laying the logs
• Sill the Logs
• Installing the Floor
• Log Wall Construction
• Log Cabin Notches
• Roof (Frame and Attach)
• Doors and Windows
• Log Cabin Exterior and Maintenance

How to Build a Log Cabin

Building a log cabin requires lots of physical and hard-work. Most of your work will be felling, cutting, peeling, notching and lifting your logs as you build the cabin. Lots of beginners will often ask:

• How long does it take to build a log home?
• How much will it cost to build a log cabin?
• Where should you build a log cabin?
• Can someone without any craftsmanship experience build a log home?
• and… How many logs will I need?!

This guide will answer all of those questions… and more importantly, it will show, discuss and teach you how to build a log home.




Step 1. Planning Your Log Cabin

Not planning your new log home is one of the most common mistakes beginners make.

It will take around 280 days to build a log cabin from scratch; make sure you spend significant time planning and making yourself comfortable with all of the phases and construction processes involved.

When we talk about planning – we don’t mean a floor plan and design. We mean a full construction schedule detailing: log preparation; site clearance; foundations; construction; and everything else that you will discover goes into building a perfect log home.

To prepare a construction schedule you will need to have:

• Goals (i.e. how long do you want to take to build a log cabin? How many bedrooms do you want etc…)
• Research (i.e. talk to log cabin owners, watch YouTube videos on construction techniques)
• Purchased Land
• Finalized a budget
• Finalized Resources (i.e. How much labor have you bribed, how and when can you use it?)
• Designed the Log Cabin and its Floor Plan

Before you attempt to start building a log cabin make sure you’ve thoroughly planned it and finalized costs. Start by reading The Most Important Stages of Your Log Cabin Build and then continue reading below.

Floor Plan and Design

The actual design of your log cabin can either seem like a very daunting phase or an opportunity to express your creative genius… depending upon your personality type and skills.

If you are the former then I would suggest contacting a specialist log cabin architect; we have a host of advice, questions to ask and how to find the right architect here.




Alternatively, if you’re looking to build a simple log cabin, then there are loads of free floor plans and designs for all sorts of log homes… start by looking at these cabin plans. These plans have been drawn by architects and feature floor plans and elevations.

Click here to read more on The Log Cabin Hub’s website.

3-) ‘Building a Log Cabin Step by Step’ by Lugarde

4-) Build a Log Cabin for a Tiny Budget by Bill Sullivan

All images and text provided by Bill Sullivan.

Living in a cozy little cabin nestled in the woods is part and parcel of the classic Thoreau-inspired lifestyle most folks dream of now and then. But the romantic vision of log-home life is shattered — for many people — by the sheer cost of such structures, which can be as high as that of equivalent conventional homes.




That doesn’t have to be the case, however. My wife and I kept down the cash outlay for our “Walden” by gathering most of the materials from the land where our house was to stand, and then building it ourselves, using only hand tools. As a result, our small home cost us only about $100 to construct … and the project was so simple that we’re convinced anyone with access to a few basic implements and a good supply of timber could build a log cabin too.

First Steps
One of the ways in which we kept our expenses down was to choose an uncomplicated design for our cabin. After researching several log house styles, we decided to build a home patterned after the Norwegian stabbur, which is a storehouse built on a raised foundation of pillars or stilts. A traditional stabbur also features extra-wide eaves, which repel rain and snow; small windows and a low door, which help reduce heat loss; and an upstairs loft, which serves to nearly double the available floor space.

The size of our cabin was limited more by our stamina than by the design. We didn’t want to have to deal with logs any longer than 16 feet, so our home measures 10 feet by 13 feet inside. Creative planning and the careful placement of doors could allow a much larger house to be built, but I always encourage first-timers to think small (and then possibly add on needed space later).

When our plans were drawn up, we chose a cleared and level site with nearby water, pitched a couple of large tents for temporary shelter, and packed in enough flour and beans to sustain us during a summer of hard work. While my father — who had volunteered to help during his vacation — worked on our outhouse, I marked the borders of the cabin’s foundation with stakes and string. Next, I dug six holes, three on each side, to a depth of 2 1/2 feet, right at the wall line of the cabin, and hauled in 20 wheelbarrowfuls of large, flat rocks that we’d gathered on the property. Using four bags of mortar mix, I made sturdy cement-and-stone piers in each of the holes, extending the supports 18 inches above ground level. After the extra spaces in the openings were packed with gravel, I topped the “stilts” with large plates of sheet metal to keep termites and small rodents out of the cabin.

Log Foraging
Next on our agenda was the exciting — and often backbreaking — task of finding, cutting, and hauling in the logs that would soon become the walls of our home. We selected trees from our dense second-growth forest which needed thinning. Most of the conifers we earmarked for our dwelling measured only about seven to nine inches in diameter and thus were too small to have commercial value. Working together, my wife and I felled each tree using a 5-foot crosscut saw and then removed the limbs. Then, with an axe or a hardwood barking spud (a 2-foot-long stick with a wedge-shaped tip) we stripped the bark off each trunk. We found that it was better to peel the logs immediately, because if the bark was left on the trunk for more than a few days, it would adhere to the dead tree and have to be laboriously whittled away with a drawknife.




After the trunks were barked, we cut them into lengths and hauled them out of the woods with the help of an old set of iron wheels that we pulled with ropes. (Fortunately, all our towing was downhill. Otherwise, we would have needed a draft horse to handle the chore.)

Collecting the sill logs (those that form the bottom layer on each wall of the cabin) required a special trip, since they had to be the largest of all. We chose trees that were at least 12 inches in diameter, so that the smaller logs we’d already cut would have adequate support when used to form the upper portions of the walls. With the sill logs at the building site, I hewed the top of each piece flat, using an adze (a tool that looks like a sideways axe, and is swung between the legs) … and checked its flatness with a straight piece of standard lumber. Then the two side sills were lowered into place atop the stone pillars I’d already constructed. Finally, I carved saddle notches into the undersides of the end sill logs and fitted them over the side timbers.

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A Fine Floor
Once the sill logs were positioned, we decided to floor the cabin before completing its walls. I first hewed flat four 8-inch-diameter joist rounds, squared their ends with an axe, and notched them into slots chiseled halfway through the side sill logs at even intervals along the length of the wall. Of course, if you use dimension lumber for your floor joists, you’ll be able to build a flatter floor faster … but such boards lack the character of — and are more expensive than — logs. We set the joists into notches carved inside the wall line, so they would be in less danger of rotting and would allow the first wall log to fit in place more easily.

Then, for the sake of simplicity, we planked our floor with 2-by-8 pieces of salvaged lumber from a demolished farm house. That underfooting served us well for several seasons. Later, we completed the floor with a tar paper layer and handsome planks of 1-by-10 fir, laid at right angles to the recycled lumber (that is, parallel to the crosswise joists).

Raising the Walls
After our cabin had a sturdy foundation and flooring, we tackled the job of notching and piling logs to form the walls. Many folks pale at the very thought of lifting heavy timbers into place, but surprisingly, we found that raising the walls can be one of the least arduous parts of the whole cabin construction process. Before we could begin, though, we had to decide — by size — the sequence in which the logs would be used, and then cut notches in the ends of each length, so that they would fit neatly into their “neighbors.” (It’s a darn good idea, at this point, to label the logs somehow so you’ll know in what order to pile them on the wall.) I chose to use one-sided saddle notches, since the fancier dovetail and Lincoln-log notches — which are carved out on the top and bottom of each log — tend to collect rainwater in the upper half and can even rot out in extremely wet areas (such as our location in western Oregon).

To make a saddle notch, I simply set a log on top of the timber it will eventually rest upon and mark a semicircle, halfway through it, that exactly matches the dimensions of the supporting log. Then I roll the top log over and cleanly chop out the notched area as marked. If the pole doesn’t fit well when I roll it back into place, I just keep trimming until it does. Sometimes, a saw cut at the edge of the notch will help keep the sides even, but it doesn’t matter if the fit is slightly ragged … since any open space will be fitted with mortar.

With our logs all carefully tagged and notched, we devised a ramp — by leaning several long poles against the top of the wall — and placed each timber, in turn, at the bottom of that ramp, parallel to the wall. Then we tied a rope to each end of the top of the wall, looped them under the log on the ground, and brought them back up to the top. Using this simple arrangement, two people (pulling, in tandem, from the opposite side of the wall) can easily raise a heavy log up the ramp and lever it into place on top. We also had to remember, as we built the walls, to alternate the timbers’ large ends in order to keep the assembly stable and level.




The Second Story
When the walls had reached the proper height, we constructed the floor for our upstairs loft bedroom using log joists just as we had for the main floor. (We were careful, however, to leave openings to accommodate the ladder and the stovepipe that would be installed later.) Then it was time to put on the gables and roof … the “crowning glory” of our little masterpiece.

In this video, Bill shows his property and cabins in the Oregon Coast Range.

Click here to read more about Bill Sullivan.

Check out his book Cabin Fever here.

“Rich with humor and natural history, this memoir of building a log cabin in the wilds of Oregon’s Coast Range takes readers to a warm world of kerosene lamplight, wood stoves, and ghost stories.

Written by a finalist for the Oregon Book Award in creative nonfiction, Cabin Fever recounts 25 summers of back-to-the-earth adventure — and also solves a murder mystery that had haunted the author’s roadless homestead. Includes 38 pen-and-ink illustrations by Janell Sorensen.”

Cabin Fever is also available on Amazon (Free with Amazon Audible trial).

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