About Berula.
Berula came out of two parallel paths. Rune Linderoth and Lasse Elgaard both spent twenty years building, renovating, and developing property in Denmark — separately, on their own portfolios, to the same quiet standard. Both ended up on Mallorca for similar reasons. After years of doing the work informally for friends, owners, and one another, they formalised it. Berula is the name on the door.
Rune is a second-generation craftsman with a deep portfolio of his own renovations across Denmark. He founded Linderoth Entreprise, a Danish carpentry and construction operation, and ran his own development pipeline alongside it for the better part of two decades.
Lasse trained as a carpenter in the same tradition and built a parallel career — builder, project lead, developer of his own portfolio. His instinct for materials and finish is what owners notice first, and what subcontractors quickly learn to meet.
What "Scandinavian property craft" means on Mallorca, concretely:
Materials
Local where local is right — stone, lime, oak. Imported where it isn't. Never specified by price alone.
Time
Schedules built on the actual work, not on a sales calendar. Honest about what twelve weeks looks like.
Communication
Weekly. Photographic. In your language. No surprises at the end of a quarter.
What the people we built for say.
“They photographed the work every week and answered every question in Danish. The finca was handed back exactly when they said it would be.”
“Berula walked the property with us before we bought it and saved us from a roof we hadn't seen. The written assessment paid for itself ten times over.”
“We have used four contractors on the island. Berula is the only one whose schedule held to the day.”