Hardscape & Pool Decking
Stamped concrete, pavers, natural stone, and tile.
Frame your pool with surroundings worthy of it.
The pool gets the headline; the deck is the room. We treat the surround as a real piece of architecture — pitched correctly, drained correctly, and detailed so it ages well after the first July storm.
Whether you want a clean broom-finished concrete pad or a travertine perimeter that wraps into a fire pit and outdoor kitchen, we self-perform the work with a crew that's done it a hundred times.
A clear pathfrom first call to final walkthrough.
- 01
Layout & Material Selection
We mock up the shape, sun exposure, and traffic flow, then pull samples so you can see colors against the actual house and pool.
- 02
Sub-Base & Drainage
Compacted base, vapor barrier where needed, and a deliberate slope away from the pool and the house. This is the part nobody sees and everybody feels.
- 03
Forming & Placement
Forms set tight to the coping, expansion joints planned around the pool radius, rebar or fiber mesh per the pour.
- 04
Finish Work
Stamping, staining, sealing, paver setting, or stone fitting. Coping and waterline tile installed flush so the eye reads one continuous surface.
- 05
Cure & Hand-Off
Sealed, joints filled, and a care guide so the deck looks the same in five summers as it does on day one.
Everything you need,nothing you don't.
We bundle the work the way it should be done — not the way it's easiest to upsell.
- Engineered sub-base and drainage planning
- Stamped, broom, salt, or smooth concrete finishes
- Paver and natural stone patios
- Coping installation tied to pool shell
- Waterline tile and decorative inlays
- Penetrating sealer on concrete and stone
Built around here.
What's the best deck material for a fiberglass pool?
+Concrete is the workhorse — durable, affordable, and easy to detail. Pavers offer the cleanest long-term look since individual units can be lifted and re-set. Natural stone is the upgrade pick when budget allows.
Will the deck crack?
+Concrete moves. We control where it moves with planned expansion and control joints, proper rebar, and a sub-base that doesn't settle. Done right, you'll see hairlines at most — never structural cracks.
Can you tie a new deck into existing concrete?
+Yes. We'll evaluate the old slab, mark the cold joint with a clean expansion line, and color-match the new pour as closely as possible.
Begin Your Backyardwith us this season.
Tell us about the space you have in mind. We'll design something timeless — built to last, made to enjoy.