— How we build

The details no one notices until they're missing.

Proper footings, plumb posts, fasteners that hold. We've been doing this work across the East Bay and Central Valley long enough to know what cuts corners look like in year three.

Close-up of a galvanized post base and fence rail joint on a wood privacy fence, shot in clear daylight — bolt hardware visible, wood grain tight against the metal bracket, concrete footing visible at the base, clean and matter-of-fact framing
Close-up of a galvanized post base and fence rail joint on a wood privacy fence, shot in clear daylight — bolt hardware visible, wood grain tight against the metal bracket, concrete footing visible at the base, clean and matter-of-fact framing
/ Built to outlast

We don't rush the work.

A fence that starts twisting in year two is a fence where someone skipped the footings or picked the wrong fasteners. We set posts correctly the first time because redoing it isn't an option we offer.

Wood, chain-link, security gates, farm fencing — every job gets the same standard. Plumb and square, or it goes back until it is.

Most people don't notice we got it right. They just notice it still looks solid in year five.

Wide environmental shot of a ranch-style chain-link fence running across an open Central Valley property in clear afternoon light — flat valley floor stretching to the horizon, dry golden grass, fence line level and taut, no people, matter-of-fact documentary framing
Wide environmental shot of a ranch-style chain-link fence running across an open Central Valley property in clear afternoon light — flat valley floor stretching to the horizon, dry golden grass, fence line level and taut, no people, matter-of-fact documentary framing
▸ Stockton to Walnut Creek

We know this region's land.

Valley heat cracks wood differently than the shaded lots under East Bay oaks. We work across Stockton, Modesto, Tracy, Brentwood, Discovery Bay, Concord, Orinda, and Walnut Creek — and that range is in every decision we make on a job.