
Custom homes for Woodbury landowners.
Built on the lot you already own in Woodbury, in the established neighborhoods south of I-94 or out toward Bailey.
Where families build before the kids start school.
Woodbury is the suburb you choose because the schools are good, the commute works, and your kids will know their neighbors. It's also where available land is shrinking, which means the houses being built now will define the next twenty years of who lives here.
Heritage builds in Woodbury for families who've outgrown what they have, who want to stay in the district, and who'd rather build the right home than keep settling for the wrong one. Many Woodbury lots come with neighborhood review and existing infrastructure to design around. We've handled both ends of that range.
Five steps from the lot you own to the home you'll live in.
The first three months are evaluation and design, where most of what makes the home worth building gets decided. The build itself runs roughly ten to twelve months on top of that.
- 01
Lot evaluation
2-3 weeks
We walk the lot together. The slope, the trees, the views, the way the light moves across it through the day. We look for what the home wants to be on this piece of ground, before any drawing starts.
- 02
Soil, perc, setback
3-4 weeks
Soil borings, percolation testing if you're on a private septic system, survey work to confirm setbacks, easements, and the buildable envelope. The findings shape the design and the budget before either gets locked.
- 03
Design for the lot
6-8 weeks
Floor plan, exterior, and site plan develop together. Design follows the land, not the other way around. You see drawings every week and weigh in before anything is finalized.
- 04
Permitting
4-8 weeks (varies)
City plan review, building permits, septic and well permits where applicable. The timeline depends on which jurisdiction you're in and how busy their queue is. Heritage handles the paperwork end to end.
- 05
Build
10-12 months
Excavation, foundation, framing, mechanicals, interior, finish. Weekly site visits, weekly written updates. One person who has been on every part of the build from groundwork through handoff.
The honest answers to the lot-specific questions that come up first.
What if my lot needs septic and well?
Most rural lots in the eastern Twin Cities do. We coordinate the well driller and the septic designer in the early phases, fold their requirements into the site plan, and price both into the build before you sign anything. Existing wells get evaluated before we plan around them.
What if the lot has slope or grading challenges?
A lot of the better lots out here do. The grade often becomes part of the design rather than a problem to fight: walkout lower levels, view orientation, drainage that works with the land. Real grading costs get scoped during evaluation, not papered over with a generic allowance.
What about easements and setbacks?
Survey work in week three or four tells us the buildable envelope before design goes deep. If an easement or setback constrains the home you had in mind, we know early enough to redesign or to tell you honestly that the lot may not fit the home you want.
What about Woodbury's HOA and design review?
Most Woodbury neighborhoods have an architectural review process, and a few have substantial HOAs. We pull the covenants and the review board's recent revision history during evaluation, design within them, and submit on your behalf. Where the board has rejected things in the past, we read the record so the first submission isn't a learning exercise.
What about an existing structure that needs to come down?
If there's a tear-down, we price demolition into the build and time it so you're not paying carrying costs on a vacant lot. If a foundation or driveway is salvageable, we look at whether reusing it actually saves money before assuming it does.
Construction-to-permanent financing, with the lot already in your name.
Build-on-your-lot financing usually means a construction-to-permanent loan: one closing, one set of fees, and the loan converts to a standard mortgage when the home is finished. The construction phase is interest-only on the drawn balance, which keeps the carry manageable while the build is in progress.
If the lot is paid off, its value can typically be applied as part of your down payment on the new build. That changes the math meaningfully, and it's the first thing a lender who works in this space will ask about. If the lot still has a loan against it, that gets folded into the construction loan rather than carried separately.
We'll connect you with lenders who specialize in build-on-your-lot. They handle this every week, not once a year, and they understand draw schedules, appraisals on unbuilt homes, and how lot equity factors in. The first call is informational, not a commitment.
The first Heritage build, week by week.
Five wooded acres in Afton, a single-level home, slab-on-grade with a safe room. The journal is the proof a home is actually being built, not the proof a builder has a portfolio.
Foundation walls, cured.

May 7. The walls cured this week. The home is shaped for single-level living, with a safe room built in instead of a basement. Walking the perimeter, the rooms have an outline you can step into. The slab comes next.
Tell us about the lot and the home you're picturing.
The first call is a conversation, not a quote. We listen, ask questions, and let you set the pace. Or call (651) 383-1710.


