/ Coastal roots. Local knowledge.

We know this island's weather, soil, and plants.

Not the regional average—the specific drainage patterns, salt exposure, and plant behavior of this coastline.

Close-up of a freshly laid coastal hardscape edge—cut pavers meeting a planted border of low salt-tolerant groundcover, afternoon light raking across the stone surface showing texture and precision
Close-up of a freshly laid coastal hardscape edge—cut pavers meeting a planted border of low salt-tolerant groundcover, afternoon light raking across the stone surface showing texture and precision
— Years of coastal work

Soil prep and drainage most crews skip.

We spec plants by how they actually perform in August salt wind—not by catalog photos. Drainage is designed for storm runoff, not average rainfall.

The estimate comes from the same person doing the installation. No hand-offs, no surprises on scope.

Wide environmental shot of a completed island garden installation—stone drainage channel running through a planted bed of mature coastal shrubs, soft overcast daylight, no people, showing the structural groundwork beneath the planting
Wide environmental shot of a completed island garden installation—stone drainage channel running through a planted bed of mature coastal shrubs, soft overcast daylight, no people, showing the structural groundwork beneath the planting
• The invisible work

Good work doesn't announce itself.

Root zone prep, gravel drainage beds, material choices rated for salt exposure—none of it shows in the finished photos. That's the point.

Plants chosen for this coastline don't need replacing in two seasons. Hardscaping built for coastal frost and salt air holds its grade for years.

Proof is in the completed work.

Browse finished installations—hardscaping, plantings, and pressure washing—photographed in place on actual island properties.