Combining technical design, master craftsmanship and exquisite materials to create stunning spaces

Craft

Decades of experience
Our team are at the core of what we do, and their skills bring structural timber framed buildings to life. Using Computer Aided Design tools alongside our traditional timber framing knowledge enables us to create truly bespoke buildings.

In-house fabrication
Our carpenters are adept at translating bespoke design and they specialise in traditional principals of framing, using hand-held tools. This long-established craft is combined with modern techniques for a precise and efficient process.

Focused on the detail
Everything is considered, from practical considerations to aesthetic details, from calculations of roof geometry to the logistics for frame raising, our focus is on ensuring a smooth project from start to finish.
Our People
Our reputation is built on the strength of our team
Heritage
We have been dedicated to delivering visionary timber-framed buildings since 1987
1987
Carpenter Oak and Woodland incorporated
1988
Seagull House
1991
Lamper Head
1992
Fire at Windsor Castle
1995
Devon yard established
1996
Bedales Theatre
1999
Scotland Yard established
2001
The Cruciform House on Grand Designs
2001
The Solar Canopy
2005
Full-scale trebuchet
2007
Stowe Garden Centre
2007
Chiddingstone Orangery
2011
Rosslyn Chapel
2012
Allies Farm, Essex
2012
Penistone Market
2016
Two Build It awards won
2017
10% employee ownership
2017
Wolfson Tree Management Centre
2018
Brixton Department Store
2021
The British Normandy Memorial
2021
Redhill Barn / The Outfarm
2021
Willowplatt Barn
2023
51% employee ownership
2023
Radley College Chapel Extension
2023
The Japanese Boathouse
2024
The Devon yard moves
Based in Wiltshire, the original company was founded by craftsman Charley Brentnall (pictured right) and architect Roderick James (pictured left).
1987

The first oak framed house constructed in the South Hams – replacing a 1950s bungalow. The full height vaulted ceiling showcases the exposed beams and rafters of oak. The large, hand stencilled, open fireplace is framed by the huge, iconic arched braces.
1988

Just down the road from the Devon yard, this huge home, with a glorious cruck-framed hall, oak framed swimming pool and panoramic views stretching from Dartmoor to the South Hams coast, is constructed.
1991

In November 1992 a fire at Windsor Castle affects 100 rooms including the Great Kitchen. Carpenter Oak would win the contract to help restore the roof of the kitchen, which had lost most of the medieval timber.
1992

The desire for newly built oak framed homes becomes more and more popular, and the Devon yard is set up in Cornworthy, near Totnes.
1995

An oak and steel framed theatre with a pyramidal roof lantern is built for Bedales School in Hampshire, in collaboration with Roderick James Architects and Feilden Clegg Bradley. The building wins national RIBA awards.
1996

Following the successful project to restore the roof of the Great Hall at Stirling Castle, the yard in Scotland is set up by the Loch of Lintrathen, Angus.
1999

A Carpenter Oak house is featured in the 2nd series of Grand Designs. The home’s unique cross-shaped layout centres around an octagonal kitchen - a stunning open-plan space perfect for socialising. A two-storey space above connects the kitchen to the galleried first-floor landing, crowned by a striking glazed roof lantern.
2001

At the time of construction, the Solar Canopy was the largest solar collector in the UK. It spans 1,300 square metres, containing 250 photovoltaic panels that generate 80,000 kilowatts of electricity per year.
2001

A full-scale trebuchet for Warwick Castle is built - it is the world’s largest working trebuchet based on designs from the 13th and 14th centuries. In 2023, after many years of daily use, the trebuchet required replacement and Warwick Castle again commissioned us, with our team dismantling it and building a new one for a new live spectacular show at the Castle.
2005

The visitor facilities, with Carpenter Oak frames for the restaurant, shop and entrance, wins RIBA regional and national awards, and a Wood Award. The design is a modern interpretation of the former barn with stainless steel ‘arms’ to hold the timber posts, allowing for the walls to be almost entirely glazed, giving views to the gardens and beyond.
2007

The incredibly challenging timber frame gridshell is built for the Grade I listed Chiddingstone Orangery, which wins the Wood Award for Best Use of Timber Frame. The timber frame gridshell is constructed from four layers of alternating lath with specially designed node clamps to keep the frame rigid whilst allowing for small amounts of settling in movement.
2007

A timber engineered Visitors Centre opens at Rosslyn Chapel in Scotland. This innovative new space was supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund and Historic Scotland, and was in collaboration with Scottish architects Page\Park and engineers Momentum.
2011

This Douglas fir framed family farmhouse wins Best Timber Frame House award at the Homebuilding & Renovating Awards. The project site sits among Nissan huts originating from a Second World War USAF airbase. The brief was to complement the unique surroundings and landscape by means of a low level, sustainable, timber family home.
2012

The huge green oak frame for Penistone Market in Yorkshire is built, being one of the largest public timber frames in the UK. It wins a national LABC Building Excellence award.
2012

Carpenter Oak wins two Build It awards, for Best Oak Frame (Hart House - a energy efficient oak glulam home) and Best Self Build (Higham-Findlow - a modern feeling home with a traditionally pegged frame).
2016

Carpenter Oak's owners take the first steps in their succession plan, by gifting 10% of the business' shares to an employee trust, and the company starts on its employee ownership journey.
2017

The Wolfson Tree Management Centre at Westonbirt wins four RIBA awards. The Centre, a 35 x 20-metre building, was required to house large agricultural machinery, and the king post truss roof was constructed with Corsican pine, felled at Westonbirt.
2017

The Brixton Department Store, with a Carpenter Oak frame, designed by Squire and Partners, wins four RIBA awards. The rooftop bar and dining room above a renovated London department store is made with six linked oak frame lanterns.
2018

The British Normandy Memorial, a tribute to the more than 22,000 Allied Forces personnel who lost their lives, was officially opened on 6 June. Carpenter Oak designed, manufactured and erected the pergola structure that covers the stone columns which have the names inscribed of the fallen.
2021

Redhill Barn wins RIBA regional and national awards, and is shortlisted as a RIBA House of the Year 2021, featuring on Grand Designs: House of the Year on Channel 4. The planed and kiln dried UK grown Douglas fir frame consists of a single truss which spams the 21m long barn, from gable to gable.
2021

The brilliant renovation of a 230-year old barn wins LABC Building Excellence Awards ‘Best Residential Conversion to Create a Single New Home’ and Build It Award for ‘Best Oak Frame Home’.
2021

Carpenter Oak becomes majority employee owned, allowing the owners to pass succession to the team instead of selling off the company to an external body, and giving the company, and the staff, to maintain its culture, standards and values.
2023

The extension for the Chapel at Radley College in Oxfordshire, with a Carpenter Oak octagonal oak roof structure, wins the RIBA South Building of the Year Award 2023 and the Regional Conservation Award.
2023

The boathouse, built from UK larch and using no mechanical fixings, wins a RIBA East award and the RIBA Small Project of the Year, as well as an Architects’ Journal Award. Built with UK grown English larch, the boathouse uses authentic Japanese timber jointing and sits by the River Cam in Cambridge.
2023

After many years in a beautiful but secluded spot near Cornworthy in the South Hams, the Devon team moves to larger facilities in Buckfastleigh, by Buckfast Abbey in Devon.
2024
