WHERE IT ALL STARTED
Kellogg Brothers, Inc. has been offering excellence in custom residential construction in Southern Fairfield County for over 85 years.
Founded as Alvah B. Kellogg, Custom Builder and Developer in 1933, the company initially focused on land development and home building. Alvah started the business when his aunt offered him farmland in Rowayton. From there, he expanded the business to other towns. The Kellogg mark of distinction is exhibited in notable communities such as Darien, Greenwich, New Canaan, Norwalk, Redding, Rowayton, Westport, and Wilton, Fairfield, and Southport. Kellogg Brothers, Inc. is best known locally for its neighborhood development projects on Hemmelskamp Road, Keeler’s Ridge Road, Cider Mill Place, Ryders Lane, and Pheasant Run Road as well as other extensive property developments throughout the community. Alvah’s sons, Sandy and Jon, worked alongside their father until they assumed ownership and renamed the business Kellogg Brothers, Inc. Jonathan Kellogg was an expert in custom millwork and operated an in-house milling facility for over 35 years. Jon was a partner with his father and Sandy managing products and developing strong relationships with clients. He learned and implemented his personal touch in builder/client relationships. He ensured that projects ran efficiently and included clients’ tastes and needs while making it an enjoyable and fun process for all involved. Sandy’s son, Tucker, has owned and operated the company independently since 2014.
For more than six decades, Tucker’s father, Sandy, embraced Wilton as both his home and his extended family. In fact, Sandy designed his first home as a sophomore in his high school drafting class. His father was so impressed with his design, that he actually built the home. He was a fixture of the Wilton community and Principal of Kellogg Brothers. An architect of the old school, Sandy did not simply draw homes for his clients as much as he breathed life into the idea of them.
This personal touch ensured that his authentic colonial designs fit with harmony into the historic and rural settings of Wilton. The hundreds of homes built by Sandy, along with his father, brother, and son Tucker, can be seen today throughout Wilton and Fairfield County.