A patio that drains well is built long before the first paver is set In Castle Rock and across the Front Range, spring projects move fast—until a patio settles, puddles,…
Navigation ▼ A practical guide for homeowners who want stability first—then curb appealWhy retaining walls fail in Castle Rock (and how to prevent it)Retaining wall materials commonly used in Colorado…
Navigation ▼ Stop washouts early—protect your grade, hardscape, and foundation perimeterWhy sloped yards erode (and why it gets worse in spring)Erosion control is a systemStep-by-stepLocal angleCTAFAQGlossary (Plain-English) Stop washouts early—protect…
Navigation ▼ Protect your slope before small washouts become expensive repairsWhy Castle Rock slopes failThe 3-part approach that actually stabilizes hillsidesQuick “Did you know?” facts for Castle Rock homeownersA practical…
Navigation ▼ Stop washouts before they start—especially on Castle Rock slopesWhy spring runoff is hard on Castle Rock landscapesA practical “runoff first” game plan (what to fix in the right…
Navigation ▼ If your patio cracked, shifted, or started pooling water after winter, it’s usually not “bad luck.”The Colorado “Patio Failure Triangle”Concrete vs. Pavers vs. StoneThe real culprit is usually…
Navigation ▼ A prevention-first guide for homeowners planning spring hardscape workWhat freeze–thaw actually does to hardscapesThe 5 most common failure points we see after winterPavers vs. concrete in a freeze–thaw…
Navigation ▼ Why February planning is the difference between a stable patio and shifting stoneWhat freeze–thaw is really doing to your patio (and why drainage is the “multiplier”)Castle Rock contextStep-by-stepCommon…
Navigation ▼ Why patios and pavers shift after winter—and what “proper base” really meansWhat freeze–thaw does to hardscapes (and why drainage matters more than you think)Base preparationStep-by-stepQuick comparison tableCastle Rock…