Pergolas that stay square

A pergola is simple — posts, beams, rafters, sky. That simplicity is why bad ones are so easy to spot: a sagging beam or a leaning post has nowhere to hide. Ours stay square because the parts you can't see are done right.

Built like a structure, not furniture

Big-box pergola kits are furniture: bolted corners, surface-mounted post bases, lumber sized to ship cheap. We build pergolas like small buildings:

Design choices that matter

If what you actually want is a solid roof against rain, that's a pavilion — see the pavilions section on our services page, and we'll quote it the same way.

What drives the price

Footprint and lumber, mainly. A 10x12 attached pergola in treated pine is the approachable end; a freestanding 16x20 in cedar with a louvered center is a serious structure with a price to match. Site conditions matter too — anchoring to an existing slab is quicker than digging four footings. As always, the quote is itemized and free, and usually back to you the same day.

Common questions

Cedar or pressure-treated lumber for a pergola?

Cedar is naturally rot-resistant, lighter, and takes stain beautifully — it's the premium look. Pressure-treated pine costs noticeably less and lasts just as long structurally, but wants a drying period before staining and will check (crack cosmetically) more over time. Overhead structures show their lumber up close, so cedar is worth it more often here than in fencing.

Does a pergola actually provide shade?

A traditional slatted top gives you filtered shade — cooler, not dark. How much depends on slat depth, spacing, and orientation; we design the top for the sun angle your patio actually gets. If you want to sit outside in the rain, you want a pavilion (a solid roof), and we build those too.

Attached or freestanding — which is better?

Attached pergolas anchor one side to the house, cost a bit less, and tie visually into the roofline — but they must be flashed and bolted correctly at the ledger, same as a deck. Freestanding pergolas can go anywhere in the yard and don't touch the house structure. The right answer is usually about where you want the shade, not the engineering.

Do pergolas need permits in Middle Tennessee?

Freestanding pergolas under typical size thresholds usually don't; attached ones sometimes do. HOA approval is the more common hurdle, and a drawing from us usually satisfies it. We'll confirm what applies at your address when we quote.

Ready to talk about your project?

Tell us what you're picturing and we'll send a same-day quote. No pressure, no sales script — just a builder's honest answer.