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Yard Transformations 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.

Yard Transformations in Danvers, MA.

One coordinated project that takes a tired property and resets it. Clear the overgrowth, rebuild the beds, re-plant, mulch, finish clean. Quoted flat before the first shovel goes in.

Town
Danvers, MA

Overview

A yard transformation is a one-shot project that takes a neglected or overgrown property and resets it — clearing brush, removing dead shrubs, building or re-cutting beds, edging, planting, and mulching. Casey and Sons quotes the whole project as a single flat price after a free on-site walkthrough, and the same owner runs the job start to finish. Most transformations take two to five days depending on scope.

What's included for Danvers properties

  • Full-property walkthrough and written quote
  • Brush and overgrowth removal
  • Bed creation, re-cutting, and edging
  • Shrub and perennial planting
  • Mulch install across all beds
  • Final haul-off and blow-down

Yard Transformations in Danvers

How yard transformations works on a Danvers property

Yard transformations in Danvers can be ambitious — Hathorne and Putnamville half-acre lots have room for full bed redesigns, new tree plantings, and re-graded lawn areas. We work in phases so the property stays usable throughout, usually 3–6 days total. Tapleyville's smaller lots take more focused single-area transformations. Properties along the Danvers Rail Trail benefit from screening plantings between the path and the yard.

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

  • How long does a yard transformation take?

    Two to five working days for most residential properties. Bigger lots or projects with hardscape elements run longer. You'll get a written timeline with the quote.

  • Do you design the planting plan?

    For simple refreshes — replacing dead shrubs, adding foundation plantings, rebuilding a bed — yes. For formal landscape architecture (retaining walls, grading, irrigation systems), we'll refer you to a designer and then install the plan.

  • 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