Painting in Biltmore Forest.
Biltmore Forest is its own incorporated town, formed in 1923. The Vanderbilt trustees — Junius Adams, Edith Vanderbilt, and Cornelia Vanderbilt — carved 1,500 acres off the Biltmore Estate, platted three-to-five-acre lots, and set house-cost minimums of $7,500 to $25,000 in 1923 dollars. Today it remains the highest-end residential market in the region.
Houses here are Colonial Revival, Tudor, English country, and Georgian estates on mature, heavily wooded lots with stone walls and circular drives. Painting work matches the homes: scaffolding, lifts, specialty trim crews, and a color consultation that runs three site visits before we land on the palette. The heavy shade means slower drying times and more mildew pressure than the rest of the city, so the spec is always premium.
What we see on Biltmore Forest homes.
Common home styles
Colonial Revival, Tudor, English country, and Georgian estates on three-to-five-acre lots with mature landscaping, stone walls, and circular drives.
Popular projects
Multi-week exterior repaint with full prep and scaffold, specialty trim and millwork, interior wall and ceiling restoration, and library and study repaints with custom color matching.
Climate & prep considerations
Heavily wooded lots mean slow drying and more mildew pressure than the rest of Asheville. We use premium mildew-resistant primers and top coats and plan around the canopy for sun windows on prep days.