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Light Hardscaping on a Danvers, MA property

Danvers properties tend to be larger than the Salem side and want consistent weekly service through a long growing season.

Light Hardscaping in Danvers, MA.

Stepping-stone paths, paver walkways, small retaining walls, and bed edging — the scale of hardscape one person can install and stand behind. Bigger structural work gets referred out.

Town
Danvers, MA

Overview

Light hardscaping covers walkways, stepping-stone paths, small retaining walls (typically under 3 feet), and hard bed edging. Casey and Sons handles the scale of hardscape that a true owner-operator can install and stand behind — not engineered patios or structural walls, which belong with a dedicated hardscape specialist. Every job gets a firm quote, a proper base, and a clean finish.

What's included for Danvers properties

  • Stepping-stone paths
  • Paver walkways up to about 60 linear feet
  • Small retaining walls (under 3 feet)
  • Steel, aluminum, or paver bed edging
  • Proper compacted base and polymeric sand where appropriate

Hardscaping in Danvers

How hardscaping works on a Danvers property

Light hardscaping in Danvers means walkway resets, paver patio rebuilds on the larger Hathorne and Putnamville lots, and small retaining wall repairs where settling has pulled stones out of true. We don't take on new full-scale retaining-wall builds; what we handle is the rebuild and repair work that older Danvers properties need every 15–20 years on existing hardscape.

Local context

Landscaping in Danvers — what makes it different

Danvers runs bigger than its neighbors. Half-acre, three-quarter-acre, and occasional full-acre residential lots are the norm in Hathorne, Putnamville, and along Route 35 up near the Topsfield line. Tapleyville has more compact turn-of-the-century housing stock with tighter lots. Danvers Center and the areas near Endicott Park sit between those extremes. The town's mature oak canopy — especially around Hathorne and the Danvers Rail Trail corridor — means fall cleanup almost always runs two visits to catch the late oak drop. Weekly mowing from May through October is where most properties land.

Neighborhoods we work in

  • Danvers Center
  • Hathorne
  • Putnamville
  • Tapleyville
  • Danversport

Local landmarks

  • Danvers Center
  • Endicott Park
  • Danvers Rail Trail
  • Hathorne
  • Putnamville

Questions

Frequently asked

  • What's the largest hardscape project you take on?

    Walkways up to about 60 linear feet, patios up to about 200 square feet, retaining walls under 3 feet. Beyond that, the right answer is a dedicated hardscape contractor — and we'll name one.

  • Do you service all of Danvers?

    Yes — Danvers Center, Hathorne, Putnamville, Tapleyville, Danversport. Larger lots up in Hathorne and Putnamville versus tighter lots in Tapleyville just means different mowing times and different bed volume per job.

  • Why do Danvers properties often need two fall cleanup visits?

    Oak canopy. Red and black oaks drop late — sometimes not until Thanksgiving — so a single early-November cleanup misses half the leaves. Most Danvers properties under mature oaks do best with an early November visit and a late November or early December final.

Begin

A yard that stays on schedule.

Free on-site estimate. Typically same-day response. Every inquiry handled personally.

Call or text · (781) 715-4254

Owner · Ben Casey