








Some front yards just need a full reset. That's exactly what we were working with here - bare, patchy ground, scattered rock, and no real structure to pull the space together. It looked tired. The kind of yard you drive past and don't think twice about.
We came in and cleared everything out first. Getting the ground prepped right is what makes the difference between a yard that looks good for a season and one that actually holds up. Once the slate was clean, we laid fresh Bermuda sod to bring green back to the open lawn area, then laid down fresh red mulch in the bed areas to give the whole front a bold, finished look.
The edging is what ties it all together. Clean lines between the sod, the mulch beds, and the concrete make the yard look intentional - not just thrown together. It's a detail a lot of people skip, but it's the first thing you notice when it's done right.
What you end up with is a front yard that actually reflects the house behind it. The brick, the wood fence detail, the landscaping - it all works together now. That's the goal every time. Not just to make it look better, but to make it feel like it belongs.