Sacred Oak Homes has been building and remodeling homes and businesses throughout the Berkshires and surrounding areas since 1990.

Guided by our core values – communication, collaboration, and craft – we have had the pleasure of co-creating hundreds of projects. Over the last three decades, we have developed relationships with a wide network of local architects, artisans, craftspeople, and suppliers. We draw on those connections and many years of experience to provide you with the best quality and service possible.

How We Work

At Sacred Oak Homes, we cultivate a collaborative environment to most effectively help you realize your building goals. We endeavor to connect with you, discover what is most important to you, and then use our knowledge and experience to help guide you in making choices that will ensure the finished space aligns with your needs and desires.

Throughout our projects, we engage in clear and open communication with every member of the team, from the architect and client to the subcontractors and suppliers. We bring awareness and mindfulness to all our efforts and work hard to make sure you are deeply satisfied with both the final product and how we get there.

Who We Serve

We enjoy working with team-oriented individuals, couples, and businesses, and especially appreciate working with conscious and responsible clients who share our respect for the earth and environment.

Sacred Oak Homes primarily serves southern Berkshire and Hampshire Counties in Massachusetts.

Steven MacLeay

Rolando Patrel

Wilfredy Aguillon

Don Voudren Jr.

Bailey Lannon

Kevin Terral

Michael Brex

Gary Porter

Katrina Dauphinais

Jim Gavron

Antonio Francisco

About Steven (and Oak Trees)

Steven MacLeay, an avid yoga practitioner and longtime resident of the Berkshires, founded Sacred Oak Homes on the principles of the Oak: strength, longevity, wisdom and renewed life.

Old Oak Trees (Quercus Robor) were venerated and used by the Druids, Ovates and Bards, and later by Kings and the Church for important meetings and ceremonies. Enduring for hundreds of years, oak trees were planted to mark boundaries and their lumber was once the main construction material for houses, churches, and ships.

In the Celtic Ogham alphabet, the letter Duir is the Oak. Duir comes from the Gaelic and Sanskrit word meaning “door.” Oaks are associated not only with the doors of our homes but as doors to inner strength, inner spirituality, and other worlds. It is said that sitting with an Oak tree will soothe the nervous system and help you solve knotty problems.