Building Outdoor Spaces That Hold Up After the First Rain
I build outdoor spaces with a small crew in Perth’s northern suburbs, mostly paving, retaining, garden beds, drainage, edging, and practical yard makeovers for family homes. I spend more time with string lines, levels, shovels, and compactors than I do with design boards. The work looks clean at the end, but most of the result comes from what I bury under the surface. I have learned to respect soil, water, access, and the habits of the people who will use the space every week.
The First Walkthrough Sets the Job
I like to walk a site slowly before I talk about finishes. A yard can look simple from the patio door, then show three different ground levels, a poor fall toward the house, and a side access barely wide enough for a wheelbarrow. On one job last winter, I had to measure the gate twice because a small machine would have saved two days of hand digging if it could fit. It could not.
I ask how the space is used before I suggest much. A retired couple might need flat paving, wide steps, and low maintenance planting, while a young family might care more about tough lawn edges and a spot for a trampoline. I have seen beautiful plans fail because nobody asked where the bins live or where the dog runs after rain. Those small details decide whether the work feels natural after the crew leaves.
Levels are the first real conversation. I carry a laser level on nearly every construction visit because eye judgment can lie, especially across a yard with old paving and tired garden beds. A fall of 20 or 30 millimetres can change where water travels during a storm. I would rather have that discussion early than cut drains into finished work later.
Groundwork Decides the Finish
Most clients notice pavers, stone, plants, and lights first. I notice what is underneath. If the base is thin, soft, or poorly compacted, the best surface in the world starts rocking, sinking, or spreading at the edges. I have lifted enough failed paving to know that shortcuts underground always find daylight later.
A customer last spring wanted a courtyard paved before a family visit, and the old base looked decent until I put a shovel through it. Under the top crust was loose sand mixed with roots and old builders’ rubble. I told him we could either patch it quickly or rebuild the base properly and push the finish back a little. He chose the slower option, and that courtyard has stayed flat through several heavy rains.
I sometimes point people toward local crews or references if they are comparing methods, and Landscape Construction is the kind of service phrase I hear homeowners use when they want the whole outdoor build handled rather than just a planting refresh. That distinction matters because construction work needs excavation, compaction, drainage, and set-out before the pretty parts happen. I tell clients to ask any contractor how deep the base will be, what material will be used, and how water will leave the area.
My usual paving base is not the same on every job. A footpath beside a house asks for a different build than a driveway edge or a poolside area, and clay soil changes the plan again. I might remove 120 millimetres in one area and much more in another because the ground tells me what it can carry. Guessing is expensive.
Materials Behave Differently on Real Sites
I like natural stone, concrete pavers, brick edging, steel edging, limestone blocks, and timber in the right place. I do not pretend they all age the same. A pale paver can glare in summer, timber can move after wet weather, and limestone can mark if irrigation hits it every morning. Good choices are practical choices.
One family asked for a dark paver around a north-facing sitting area because it looked sharp in the sample rack. I placed the sample outside for a few hours and asked them to stand on it in bare feet. That changed the discussion fast. We ended up using a lighter unit with a textured face, and the space is more usable on hot afternoons.
I also think about the trades that come after me. If an electrician is adding garden lights, I want conduit in before paving goes down. If irrigation is planned, I want sleeves under paths and enough room around valves for someone to repair them without breaking the edge. A neat finish is not much use if the first repair damages it.
Clients often ask whether premium materials are worth the money. My honest answer is that some are, and some are mostly taste. I would rather see a mid-range paver on a properly prepared base than an expensive surface sitting on rushed groundwork. Spend where failure would hurt most.
Drainage Is the Part Clients Stop Seeing
Water is patient. It will find the low point, the loose joint, the back of a wall, or the corner where nobody wanted a drain grate. I have opened up garden beds where water had been sitting against a retaining wall for years, slowly staining blocks and pushing soil through gaps. The wall did not fail in one storm, it failed by being ignored.
On many jobs, I set the drain plan before I set the final paving pattern. A 100 millimetre strip drain near a door can protect a room better than a fancy border course. Behind retaining walls, I want clean stone, fabric where it makes sense, and a proper outlet instead of a buried pipe that ends nowhere. Water needs an exit.
One narrow side path taught me a lesson years ago. The owner had paid for tidy paving, but the fall sent roof runoff straight along the fence line and into a low garden pocket. We pulled up the first few metres, changed the base, added a drain, and re-laid the area with a small change in fall. The repair cost several thousand dollars because the original work treated drainage like an afterthought.
I do not make every yard full of grates. Sometimes a simple swale, a gravel strip, or a lowered planting bed solves the problem with less noise and less visual clutter. The best drainage work is often quiet. I know I have done it well when nobody talks about it after the first storm.
How I Hand Over a Finished Yard
The last day on a job is not just sweeping sand and loading tools. I walk the client through the space and point out the things that will change during the first few months. Fresh soil settles, new plants sulk for a week, and paving joints may need a light top-up after traffic and rain. I would rather explain that face to face than have someone worry over normal movement.
I leave simple care notes in plain language. For paving, that might mean keeping heavy vehicles off the new area for a short period and rinsing spills before they stain. For garden beds, I talk about watering deeply instead of giving plants a quick splash every afternoon. A yard can be built well and still suffer from poor habits.
I also tell people what to watch. If water pools near a door, call me. If a retaining wall weep hole stops draining, do not cover it with mulch and hope. If an edge starts to move, deal with it early while the repair is small. Small warnings save big repairs.
Landscape construction has made me patient because every site argues back in its own way. I can bring good tools, a careful crew, and a clear plan, yet the soil, weather, access, and old work under the surface still shape the job. The outdoor spaces I feel proud of are not the flashiest ones. They are the ones that still feel solid, useful, and easy to live with after the newness wears off.


