
Every service starts below the surface.
Sod fails when drainage is wrong. Walls fail when bearing load is ignored. We scope each service around the root condition first, then the finish.










Grade and drainage before the first roll.
We assess soil compaction, surface slope, and existing drainage before selecting a sod variety. The subsurface prep determines whether sod survives its first summer.
Installation includes soil amendment, precision grading to eliminate low spots, and edge finishing against hardscape or planting beds.
Zones calibrated to what each area actually needs.
Lawn zones run on different schedules and pressure ratings than shrub beds. We design the zone map first—then trench, lay line, and set heads at the correct arc and radius for the plantings they serve.
Every system includes a backflow preventer, a rain sensor, and a smart controller pre-programmed for the property's orientation and soil type.
Load-bearing, site-specific, built to hold.
We calculate lateral soil pressure and drainage requirements before specifying block, stone, or timber. Batter angle, drainage course, and deadman placement are determined by the site—not by a catalog.
Every wall includes a compacted gravel drainage bed and perforated drain tile to prevent hydrostatic pressure buildup—the failure mechanism most walls skip.
Structure-informed cuts, not cosmetic shaping.
We trim to the plant's natural growth habit and the property's sightlines—removing crossing limbs, dead wood, and competing leaders before addressing canopy shape.
Scheduled trimming programs are available for properties with established plantings that need consistent maintenance to remain integrated with the hardscape around them.
Structural builds anchored to the property's grade.
Post footings are sized to frost depth and load requirements for the specific span. We specify lumber grade, hardware, and connection detail before framing begins—the same rigor applied to any load-bearing structure.
Pergolas and gazebos are sited and oriented relative to drainage, sun angle, and the hardscape they adjoin—not placed arbitrarily on whatever flat patch is available.
One service is often the entry point to the full picture.
A site assessment covers the whole property—not just the scope you called about. Bring us the problem; we'll show you what connects to it.
