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- Brett tackles a historic 1887 Victorian home built in Altadena, California, by Andrew McNally of Rand McNally publishing fame. In 1897 a Turkish Room was added to the home with materials from the Turkish Building at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. To retain the home's grandeur, Brett relocates the kitchen and entryway. Then, he tackles the main bedroom and bath, which have lost their original style.
- Tim McClellan is called in to help a local sheriff and his wife modernize their home while keeping its historical bones intact. Years of bad renovations, an ugly design and a challenging layout have stripped the house of its original character, challenging Tim to come up with new designs and builds in order to breathe life back into the home.
- Tim McClellan is recruited to revamp a couple's 100-year-old guest quarters in Jerome, AZ. Originally built for the town dentist, Tim cracks open the history books and rolls up his sleeves to transform the shabby suite into a historic treasure.
- Tim is recruited by a Jerome, AZ, family to help restore their 90-year-old teacher's boarding house that has fallen into disrepair but retains much of its original detail. Tim passes every test while restoring this house and creates a special piece of heirloom quality furniture that will be cherished by the family for generations to come.
- The Mt. Olivet Church has been the heart of Pocahontas County, WV, for 137 years. The old log structure is struggling to survive, so Mark and the guys are brought in to take it down so it can be restored and live a new life. As the job comes to a close, however, the community pulls off a surprise ending. The guys then get their first look at Johnny Jett's fully finished Kentucky chapel.
- In the second phase of Tamara's 1905 Colonial renovation, she creates a 900-square-foot master suite and converts one of the home's seven sun porches into a closet. However, her budget takes a hit when she needs to install a new HVAC unit and her plan to save a vintage fireplace might have run out of gas.
- An active Florida family recently traded in the tropical life for the cool countryside in Auburntown, Tennessee. Their scenic backyard is the prime location for a pool, but the Pool Kings discover something early in the build that may jeopardize this family's plan for a pool.
- After moving to their forever home, a young family from College Grove, TN, is ready to build their dream pool. The Pool Kings accept the challenge, creating a tropical paradise with a massive waterfall, a swim-up bar and an oversized outdoor kitchen.
- Continuing renovations on a large and bland contemporary home, Tamara Day tackles the master suite and replaces lots of dated cabinetry to make a stylish bathroom. She also creates a home theater, immense deck and patio to turn the home into an entertaining showpiece.
- A Nashville family is ready for Kyle and Justin to build the perfect pool in their backyard. The project gets off to a 4,000-pound rocky start, but that doesn't slow down the Pool Kings. Kyle and Justin deliver a phenomenal backyard complete with a massive waterfall, a beautiful pavilion and even light the water on fire.
- The Barnwood Builders never give up on a log cabin and despite some rough going early on, this one turns out to be worth all the extra effort. Mark goes on a cross-county search for replacement logs while the team finds creative ways of pulling the cabin apart without sacrificing its logs.
- Tamara Day tackles a large 1905 Colonial with seven sun porches. She turns a cramped, ugly kitchen and a dining room into the ultimate entertaining space, but unsupported floors and a strange noise during demo slow her plans and may cost her big money.
- For home restoration expert Tamara Day, there's no such thing as a home that's too big. This Kansas City native and mother of four specializes in restoring the neglected large homes that others are too scared to take on. She brings these big beauties back to life so that new families can move in and love them again.
- Mark's clients want bigger and bigger antique log homes, but the pioneers didn't build big log cabins. They did build big barns, though, so the guys try to build a 1200 square foot cabin using barn beams from their Boneyard inventory. And Mark's friend shows up to make a one-of-a-kind whiskey tap out of an unused beam end.
- 2013– 40mTV-GTV EpisodeMark and the guys travel to Gatlinburg, TN, to replace a log home lost in the 2016 wildfires. They bring with them the Beam Cabin they built on the yard last year, but it's no easy feat to move these massive logs up a narrow mountain pass. Designer Karen Tillery works with Mark to renovate on the fly.
- Mark splits up his crew so they can conquer two jobs at the same time. Johnny and Tim take down a big tobacco barn that has plenty of antique material worth salvaging, while Graham and Alex tackle a log cabin that's still in great shape. Mark also pays a visit to two sisters to see how they finished the craft store the guys built for them last season.
- The guys are finding creative uses for all of their leftovers! Every time they take a cabin down, they end up with extra inventory. Using spare small beams, they'll build a pavilion and sell their scraps as upcycled products.
- Mark and the guys meet in a log cabin to swap stories and share laughs about their adventures in the antique barn business. This special episode includes behind-the-scenes fun, never-before-seen footage and some great memories of the first three seasons of Barnwood Builders.
- The Barnwood Builders find themselves in unfamiliar territory as they transform a nearby office space into a showroom for their business. They use vertical barnwood, horizontal barnwood and a timber frame facade. Then they finish off the room with barn doors, hand-crafted items and reclaimed roofing tin.
- The Barnwood Builders get ready for a farm wedding by building a barnwood dance floor, a timber-frame photo booth and an incredible handcrafted wedding arbor. Mark and the guys also work on a custom-designed split rail fence for the bride to walk past as the guests watch from hay bale seating. It's a day filled with something old, something new, something borrowed - and something barnwood.
- Mark and the guys return to Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, where they stripped a massive bank barn earlier this year. This time, they are back for the incredible chestnut beams. The roof gives them some trouble, but Johnny's up for the task. They save the central bents, carve up the outer bents and lift out the sleeper logs. Mark visits an incredible bank barn wedding venue and he learns to cut soap stone with a water jet.
- The HGTV Smart Home 2018 is nestled in the tall grasses of the low country in South Carolina and we're taking you from start to finish as we build the smartest, most efficient home we've ever given away. With Jeff Devlin handling the build and Tiffany Brooks focusing on design, this home will surprise, entertain and make life a little easier. One lucky person will win it all -- this incredible home, everything in it, the new Mercedes-Benz GLC 350e Plug-In Hybrid and $100,000 from national mortgage lender Quicken Loans. It's a grand prize package worth over $1.6 million.
- The Barnwood Builders have taken down big barns, but they've never seen a log home this large. As they dismantle the Ohio cabin, the guys discover that it's filled with history, craftsmanship and a lot of cherished memories. Mark also gives the cabin owner tips on how to convert her family's old barn into a modern home.
- The Barnwood Builders build a pioneer blacksmith shop made from reclaimed beams, barnwood and rafters to serve as their office breakroom. Mark helps set up the frame, then a local blacksmith installs the forge and gives the guys a lesson at the anvil. When the blacksmith shop is complete, the Barnwood Builders gather in their breakroom to hammer away.
- A Florida family recruits the Pool Kings to design a sleek, modern pool for their new oceanfront home on Tampa Bay. The crew creates an over-the-top pool with a vanishing edge spa and a roman soaking tub that's adorned with LED lighting and fire bowls.
- Mark and the guys build a massive, and very complicated, log home high in the Blue Ridge Mountains. To make this unique design work, they create an entirely new kind of notch. They work with a local team of craftsmen to pull off this high-stakes build.
- While Mark is on the road drumming up new business, the guys pick off a list of chores on the Boneyard, including stacking the Hamlin cabin. Mark checks out the most incredible hand-hewn timber-frame barn he's ever seen and visits a beautifully restored historic home owned by Super Bowl champ, Jeff Hostetler.
- Mark challenges his crew to build a log fort on the Boneyard. They use spare logs and some serious hillbilly know-how to construct a pioneer cantilevered fort, but when the temperature takes an unexpected plunge, the job becomes more difficult.
- 2014– 39mTV-G8.5 (13)TV EpisodeRichart and his son build an eco-friendly island in Isla Mujeres, Mexico.
- The Barnwood Builders teach two young apprentices how to build a timber frame barn in Weston, West Virginia. Mark Bowe explores the finished 4-H cabin at Jackson's Mill, and Mark Battle checks out a finished mountain top retreat in New Market, Virginia.
- 2013– 40mTV-GTV EpisodeThe Barnwood Builders 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. Karen designs the interior.
- 2013– 40mTV-GTV EpisodeThe Barnwood Builders volunteer to help Boy Scout troop 248 build a new lodge out of their old lodge. Mark and the guys have a lot to teach these boys about the pioneer life. And the boys' determination gives the Barnwood Builders something in return; hope for the future.
- Tamara Day tackles a 1905 Kansas City Shirtwaist home. This 3100 square foot Kansas City special is short on bathrooms, with only one, but it's not short on charm. Tamara restores the front door but struggles with sewer and roof issues that cost her and cause her to rework her plans. The old fireplace needs an update that will make a statement; while renovating the kitchen, Tamara decides she needs a custom table for the bay window bench.
- Mark finds a cabin from a unique moment in history when pioneers started using new technology -- the sawmill. The crew also discovers their showroom manager has a surprising personal connection to the home. Later, Mark visits another West Virginia cabin filled with family memories.
- A big family on a large property in Santa Clarita, CA, wants to replace their old brick patio and pool with an updated design that is fun for everyone. Mike and Jim deliver on the dream by transforming the yard into a canyon country playground. The family's backyard oasis includes a 100-foot lazy river, a family-sized cave grotto, a network of massive waterfalls, a personal mountain range and a steel-reinforced rope swing.
- Tamara Day starts on a 1900 Kansas City Shirtwaist-style home containing a living room with a catwalk instead of a ceiling. She pulls up linoleum flooring and gives the damaged foyer staircase a facelift, but a boiler stack in the kitchen throws a wrench in her plans.
- The Barnwood Builders pull into New Ringgold, Pennsylvania, in a covered wagon, ready to take down and move a very complicated carriage house. They find all sorts of treasures in the 150-year-old pioneer garage before they carefully strip it, lift the roof off in sections and disassemble the beams.
- Tamara Day sees great potential in a 1938 cottage with an unusual layout, unfinished renovation and no front door. She constructs a cathedral ceiling and creates two massive cedar corbels for the entrance, but the process of installing an egress window puts a crack in her budget.
- Homeowners Chris and Dolores Holman take host John DeSilvia on a tour of their recent renovations, all by an unqualified contractor who did the work entirely too quickly and completely incorrectly. Immediately, John notices that there are cracks forming around the opening the contractor made when knocking down a wall. Inspecting a leak in the upstairs crawlspace, he discovers that the shingles were not installed properly either. John DeSilvia wastes no time starting demolition in search of the reasons for the cracking and sagging interior of the home. The family is at risk until they get to the bottom of this, and John DeSilivia makes sure their home is structurally sound.
- Listen up! Hosted by tech expert Corey Greenberg, this DIY Workshop offers the step-by-step planning and construction of a unique, high-tech personal home theater. Our experts explore the digital landscape with in-depth explanations of digital television choices, options for programming delivery, acoustic and engineering considerations that impact a home theater design, and much more! Home Theater Workshop makes your home theater experience sound just right!
- Guest Kathy Cano-Murillo explains the meaning of Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) and how this traditional Mexican holiday is celebrated. Kathy explains the importance of having an altar to honor the dead and demonstrates how to make one out of a decorated cigar box, embellished with candles, photos, and other mementos. Kathy whips up a felt banner, some white-chocolate sugar skulls, and folds up tissue paper into festive flowers.
- In the hills of Alabama, the Barnwood Builders take on their most-complicated build ever to create a monster-sized wedding pavilion dreamed up by designer Karen Tillery. It's the perfect marriage of wood and steel. Mark Bowe hews out a log the old fashioned way with a hand made broad ax.
- Mark 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.
- After moving into a lovely Santa Barbara, CA, home that once belonged to a master gardener, this family with little interest in gardening decides to get help. Mike and Jim are on hand to help build something that better suits the family's needs. They're turning a garden path into a swimming lane and the flowerbed into a stylish pool house. The home's charming trellis, however, stays put and makes the finished project a geometric masterpiece.
- Mark Bowe and his crew work through layers of architectural history to uncover an original pioneer home in Minor Hill, Tennessee, and they hear stories from family members who lived in the cabin. Mark also visits a beautifully restored log home with its own extensive family history.
- A family that loves to entertain relocates from Chicago to Nashville and is in desperate need of a pool for the hot summer days. However, their current backyard is an eyesore and not functional for the kids, so the renovation experts work to transform the space into the ultimate pool party paradise.
- A Franklin, TN, couple enlists the Pool Kings to build their dream pool in their very challenging backyard. From steep slopes and tight access to tough weather conditions, Kyle and Justin have their work cut out for them to deliver a one-of-a-kind backyard paradise.
- A Franklin, TN family is in desperate need of a pool rescue. They have been living with an unfinished pool for over 2 years. Kyle and Justin step in to transform this backyard from a state of chaos to something beyond the family's wildest dreams.
- Organization specialist Kraig Bantle and the crew from Garage Brothers, a family business based in Raleigh, N.C., offer to clean up garages, basements and attics that are out of control. Kraig and his team clear the clutter and repurpose the spaces into rooms that homeowners can enjoy. The catch? The crew takes any valuables they find and resells them, hoping to turn a profit.
- Mark and the guys save the logs from a fire-damaged home in West Virginia. Mark promises the family who sold him the cabin that he will honor their history here. He calls it Grandma's Cabin. Once the logs are salvaged, the Barnwood Builders rebuild Grandma's Cabin on the Boneyard for a client in Montana.