Morton Buildings, Inc.

3.7
6 reviews

About

Construction CompanyHome BuilderShed BuilderGarage Builder
Founded in 1903, Morton Buildings specializes in post-frame construction buildings throughout all of America. We construct durable, custom buildings for a variety of residential, farm, equestrian, commercial and community projects. We take pride in manufacturing our own high-quality products to ensure your building is made to last. Learn more about our projects or contact us today to get started.

Location

Morton Buildings, Inc.
2355 Chris-Na-Mar Road, Dodgeville, WI
53533, United States

Hours

Reviews

3.7
6 reviews
5 stars
4
4 stars
0
3 stars
0
2 stars
0
1 star
2
  • LM
    Lauren Mortensen
    Sep 10, 2025
    5.0
    We recently completed a build with Morton and without question, the single most important factor in its success was our foreman, Sean Adkins. His dedication, professionalism, and sheer work ethic went far beyond any expectation. He treated our build as if it were his own, catching details others missed, solving problems before they surfaced, and ensuring that every aspect of the project met the highest standards. My husband and I have never met someone with such unwavering integrity and commitment to doing things the right way. If you're considering building with Morton, do everything you can to have him on your team. Morton is lucky to have such a remarkable individual representing their company.
  • DA
    Diane Anderson
    Aug 12, 2024
    1.0
    For a simple barn addition, the salesman messed up the quote, couldn't install what was promised. Forgot to deliver the dumpster, my elderly husband and I had to load after the job. We agreed to them shorting us 70 square feet, their mistake, then they failed to credit us a fair amount or even talk about it. For the incredibly high price, we expected more quality and professionalism. Save your money. We will never do business with them again.
  • DV
    Doreen Vroman
    Feb 8, 2023
    5.0
    Chris Aultman was our go to person. Very professional. Listened to what we wanted, added his expertise in areas we did not know much about. Kept us informed on when workers will be here and reasons why they were not here. We would build with Morton Buildings again.
  • AG
    Adam Gebert
    May 28, 2020
    5.0
    I was looking for material, skylight panels I talked with Jolene. I was educated and pointed in the right direction to find what I was looking for. Professional and courteous. Thank you.
  • JL
    Jim Lehman
    Mar 17, 2019
    1.0
    I chose Morton given a reputation for quality. Unfortunately, the customer service is not. I would look elsewhere - there are other good options. If you do choose them, don't believe anything the salesman says and make sure everything is clearly down in writing. This was my mistake. On my initial planning meeting, the salesman tried to talk me out of a service door. This is for a detached shop so I will be using this door all the time. He said fine, he has a door they never used in his office. They would just put that one in. (Not in writing though.) Fortunately, I noticed they had no opening for the door when they started building. The shop is not by my house so I easily could have missed this. They would not have put it in. I caught it in time but they went ahead and added an $800 "change order". Fine. Not a big deal in the grand scheme. I had planned in floor heat from the start. All the salesman put down in the plans was "2" foam to fasten the pex tube". He said not to worry about the tubing, the cost would be $3-400. A few days before the concrete was scheduled, I get a frantic call saying "we didn't know about in floor heat". They scrambled to get someone who would come on a Saturday to do it but the quote was $3000 just to lay the tubing. I told the salesman that in floor heat was the plan the entire time but he didn't seem to recall and was annoyed that I questioned him. I wonder what he thought the pex in the concrete was for? About 4-6 weeks after everything was done (except the garage doors - we will get to that) I get a call asking if everything was working out fine and can we close the project? I asked them if they had insulated the ceiling as planned? They checked the plans. Yeah, forgot about that too. Garage doors. On the first planning meeting, I told the salesman I was probably going to go with stamped steel doors. He said he thought he knew just what I was looking for. They were putting in some doors just like that and he would send me a picture later that day. This is in May. No picture. All summer, I asked him about a dozen times to finalize my doors (I was told door orders usually took 3 weeks). Phone calls, texts, emails. Every time I would either get no reply or he "would send a picture later today". He never would. 4 months pass. Finally I reached the conclusion he was not going to get it done for them to be on hand after concrete. His incompetence had been made increasingly clear as the project went on. It's now September and I really wanted it sealed up before winter. I started looking for quotes myself. I found some and ordered them early Oct. The Morton salesman called me 2 weeks after concrete was poured and said he just needed a color and could order my doors. Keep in mind, I didn't pick a door from him (there are dozens of style choices not just colors) and it's now 2 weeks after concrete and he hasn't even ordered. It took my doors 4 months to arrive. I used the same brand Morton was planning to order so would have been in the same situation. I didn't get doors until February and spent the winter shoveling drifted snow out of the building. I've since discussed all this with the Morton people. They don't seem to think any of this is their problem. In conclusion, this seemed like their first project. No one seemed to know the building plans. The salesman liked to tell me things verbally, not write them down, then forget it happened. The building itself seems like good quality and the guys on the job site communicated well. Given the mistakes above and their lack of interest in recognizing them, I doubt the warranty is worth much. I would definitely look elsewhere if you are in the market for a building.