Mark Bowe and the guys travel to Montana so they can rebuild Grandma's cabin from last season. They give the 150-year-old home a new life as a cliff-side lodge. They also explore wild west cabins and enjoy some Montana ranch fun.
Mark Bowe and the guys take on their biggest build yet, resurrecting the massive New England timber frame from last season as a family retreat in South Carolina. It's six days of heavy lifting, precision craftsmanship and big fun.
Mark Bowe and the guys wade into the water to save a dilapidated springhouse. Johnny and Tim go exploring while Mark and Graham clean up the spring. Back at the boneyard, they rebuild the springhouse and finish the inside of the container cabin.
Mark Bowe and the guys take the 100-percent cabin to South Carolina where they rebuild it as a hunting cabin. While they are there, they work with the client's kids to build a camping cabin out of their ancestor's log home.
Mark Bowe and the guys explore a perfect pioneer settlement complete with wood, water, and stone. They save the classic log cabin and repurpose the rare hand-cut sandstone chimney into a fire pit grill.
Mark Bowe and the guys have to build their own road to reach a cabin that has been overgrown for 11 years. Rose Riggs never got to finish her dream cabin, but Mark will make sure it gets a new life. He salvages some of the wood to make an incredible rose inlaid table for Rose's daughter.
Mark Bowe and the crew work with one of their most passionate and knowledgeable clients yet. Together, they build a huge double pen log cabin on a platform 13 feet off the ground. This will be the master suite on a high-end vacation rental. Mark builds the outside while Karen designs the interior.
The Barnwood Builders go deep in the holler near Ruddle, West Virginia, to reclaim a rare one-room log schoolhouse full of history. Back on the boneyard, the schoolhouse gets a whole new life.
The team brings an Appalachian-style cabin all the way to western Colorado. At the Canyon of the Ancients Ranch, they explore the stacked stone ruins of the ancestral Puebloans and also leave behind a legacy of their own. Before they leave, they also rebuild the Virginia springhouse, which will support a living roof.
Mark Bowe and the guys use over 100 antique logs from two tobacco barns to build a dramatic entrance for their client's property. The drive-through double corn crib requires a whole lot of teamwork and involves some of the trickiest notching they've ever done.
The Barnwood Builders are finding creative uses for all of their leftovers! Every time they take a cabin down, they end up with extra inventory. So instead of burning the small beams, they'll use them to build a Parts and Pieces Pavilion to sell their scraps as upcycled products.
In the shadow of the New River Gorge Bridge, the Barnwood Builders work with three centuries of materials and techniques in one project. Using custom 21st-century steel brackets and hand-hewn 19th-century beams, they create a one-of-a-kind pavilion for the Wild Rock Community Center.
The guys take down a massive double-pen barn in southern Indiana. While they work to save every log and barn board, Mark Bowe visits an incredible lodge built from a different barn they took down in nearby St. Meinrad.
Your favorite shows, personalities and exclusive originals. All in one place.
Keep up with your favorite shows and hosts plus share ideas with other DIY fans.
Top tech plus sophisticated style in Pittsburgh, PA
A gorgeous home on Hilton Head Island, SC
An amazing renovation in Minneapolis, MN