Painting in Biltmore Village.
Biltmore Village sits at the entrance to the Biltmore Estate. It was built in the 19th century as a planned community for estate workers, which is why the layout feels deliberate and the architecture is consistent: Tudor revival, half-timber detail, slate roofs, and a mixed-use retail corridor that has aged into the high-traffic walkable district it is today.
Painting in Biltmore Village means working around foot traffic, commercial neighbors, and historic detail. The Tudor revival half-timber needs careful color matching where black and cream meet, and a lot of our commercial work here is scheduled for early-morning windows so we are off the sidewalk before the shops open. The residences behind the commercial strip get the same prep standard we bring to Montford.
What we see on Biltmore Village homes.
Common home styles
Tudor revival residences, half-timber storefronts, mixed-use historic buildings, and a small layer of newer residences behind the commercial corridor.
Popular projects
Tudor revival exterior repaint with half-timber color separation, mixed-use commercial repaint scheduled around shop hours, interior commercial repaint, and residential interior and exterior work behind the commercial strip.
Climate & prep considerations
Mountain humidity is the same as the rest of Asheville. The added factor here is foot traffic and commercial neighbors, which means more masking, more night-and-early-morning scheduling, and tighter cleanup protocols.