Awards

Over the past years, Bickford Construction Corporation has been recognized by the Home Builders and Remodelers Association of Northern Vermont with the following awards.

Click on the Award Titles below to read more about our awards.

2008 Best Luxury Home over $1,000,000

This project gave us the opportunity to build our customer’s dream home on a beautiful lot located at the end of a secluded cove on the north shore of Mallets Bay.

2006 T. Wayne Condor Builder of the Year Award

In 2006, the Home Builders and Remodelers Association of Northern Vermont awarded Bob Bickford with the T. Wayne Condor Builder of the Year Achievement Award.

2004 Best Single Family Home Under 2,000 SF - Bronze Award

While being small and manageable in size, this house is big in features!

2003 - Best Luxury Home Cost $500,000 to $1,000,000 - Silver Award

This wonderfully updated five bedroom, five and a half bathroom farmhouse, has 3,400 square feet of living space, plus a full walkout basement, and has an exterior style that complements the existing barn that came with the twenty-acre lot they purchased in this rural part of Essex Town.

2003 - Best Mixed Use Project - Silver Award

This award is for a mixed use facility that houses both the state-of-the-ard Finest Image Photography Studio and the proprietor's home above.

2002 Single Family Home 2,501 to 3,000 SF - Silver Award

This wonderfully updated five bedroom, five and a half bathroom farmhouse, has 3,400 square feet of living space, plus a full walkout basement, and has an exterior style that complements the existing barn that came with the twenty-acre lot they purchased in this rural part of Essex Town.

2002 Best Luxury Home - Cost Over $1,000,000 - Bronze Award

With a main objective of building a quiet and peaceful house, the Rushes decided before they even had a plan, that the house would be constructed from insulated concrete forms (ICF’s).

2002 Single Family Home over 3,000 SF - Bronze Award

The Homeowners wanted to have a home that looked like a classic Vermont L-shaped farmhouse on the outside but that had a open, usable floor plan on the inside.