
Building a Viking Longhouse in Minecraft: Complete Guide
A Viking longhouse in Minecraft is essentially a large, rectangular building with a distinctive curved or angled roof, built from wood and natural materials. It's a practical design that works great as a base, storage facility, or centerpiece for a Nordic-themed world.
What Makes a Viking Longhouse Different
The appeal of a Viking longhouse isn't just aesthetic. This structure reflects historical design: long and narrow, sturdy enough to withstand weather, with an interior that served multiple purposes. In Minecraft terms, that means plenty of interior space for storage, crafting tables, and living areas without needing massive wall dimensions.
The defining feature is the roof.
Unlike a standard pitched roof, Viking longhouses typically have that characteristic overhanging slope that extends partway down the walls, almost like the building is hunching against the wind. It's practical and iconic at once. And if you're building on a multiplayer server (check our server status checker to keep an eye on your world), it's a design that reads clearly from a distance, which matters when you've got a sprawling base.
Gathering Your Materials
Here's where most people stumble. They grab oak wood and think they're good to go.
You'll want a mix. Dark oak for the heavy support beams, regular oak planks for the walls, and spruce or dark oak stairs for the roof. Thatch isn't a Minecraft block, so we're faking it with hay bales (golden and warm-looking) or dark oak slabs layered together. Some builders use grass blocks on the outer roof layer for that overgrown, aged appearance, which honestly looks better than pure hay once weathered.
Grab stripped logs too. They add visual contrast to your frame and break up the monotony of solid wood walls. For the foundation and lower structure, stone bricks or deepslate bricks ground the whole thing, especially if you're building on a landscape that needs some leveling.
If you're not sure what blocks work best together, the Minecraft block search tool lets you filter by wood type and material, which saves time when you're planning your palette.
Building the Foundation and Frame
Start with a rectangular footprint. Vikings thought in practical dimensions, so aim for something like 20-30 blocks long and 12-16 blocks wide. That's roomy without feeling excessive.
Lay your foundation first, either a raised platform of stone or a simple ground-level base. I'd recommend raising it slightly (about 3-4 blocks) so water doesn't collect around the walls and to give the interior headroom that feels intentional.
Now the frame: Place your main support columns using dark oak logs at the corners and every 4-5 blocks along the perimeter. These should extend from the foundation up to where your roof will peak. Connect them with dark oak beams running horizontally. Honestly, the idea is that anyone looking at it should see the skeleton of the structure first, even before the walls go up. That skeletal look is very Viking longhouse.
Fill in the walls between the frame posts.
Mix oak planks, stripped dark oak, and maybe some deepslate or stone bricks near the base. Alternate in a pattern that feels organic, not perfectly symmetrical. Throw in a few gaps too - actual longhouses had small window openings, and you can create those by leaving 2x2 or 3x3 spaces in strategic places. Don't overdo windows though. Vikings weren't big on natural light inside their buildings.
Creating the Iconic Roof
This is where the build either lands or falls flat.

The roof needs to slope down from a central peak toward both the front and back of the structure, then extend outward another block or two past the wall line. Start by running a line of dark oak stairs inverted along the roof peak, then lay stairs on each side angling downward. The stairs create that natural slope without needing half-blocks everywhere.
Once your stair framework is in place, cover it with dark oak slabs on the outer layer for texture. Then add hay bales or grass blocks on top of the slabs. Some builders layer them to create depth - alternating between hay and dark oak creates visual interest and looks less flat. The overhang is crucial: extend the roof 2-3 blocks beyond your wall on all sides. This protects the walls from rain (in reality) and makes the building look more settled into its environment.
For weathering, leave some moss blocks on the north-facing sides of the roof if you're going for an aged appearance.
Designing the Interior
A longhouse's interior should feel like one big multipurpose space, even if you're dividing it functionally. Run a line of support columns down the center of the building to help carry the roof load and naturally section off areas.
One section works as sleeping quarters with a few beds or an elevated wooden platform. Another becomes your crafting and storage zone with chests, furnaces, and workbenches lined up along one wall. Leave the central area relatively open for movement. Vikings didn't have separate rooms, so you shouldn't either, but breaking sightlines with furniture makes the space feel less like a tunnel.
The floor can be packed earth, wood planks, or stone - whatever fits your aesthetic.
I'd lean toward dark oak planks or unpolished deepslate to match the building's heaviness. Throw in some carpet or rugs (dyed wool works) to define different zones and add warmth. A central hearth would be thematic - stack some blackstone in the middle with a cauldron on top, or use a campfire if you want actual flames (watch for fire spread though).
Adding Authentic Details
Doors matter more than you'd think. Use dark oak doors, and consider adding a small wooden porch or entrance platform jutting out from one end. Place banners above the entrance - they flap and add life to otherwise static architecture.
Outside, scatter a few smaller structures nearby. A small storage shed, a fence for animals, maybe a drying rack for fish (made from fence posts and chains). These details make the longhouse feel like an actual settlement rather than a standalone building.
Finally, light it properly.
Candles (actual Minecraft candles) inside windows glow warmly. Lanterns on posts around the perimeter provide exterior light without breaking immersion. Torches are fine but less aesthetic. Once you've got the structure complete, a warm light source transforms how the whole thing reads at night.
Build this on a server with active players (check who's online before choosing), and your longhouse becomes a community landmark. It's substantial enough to feel like something real, and the modular design means you can expand or customize based on what your base actually needs.
Lead writer at minecraft.how. Long-time Minecraft player running a small SMP server, testing every build, mod, and seed before writing about it.

