


Winter is hard on fences. Freeze-thaw cycles, moisture, and general wear can turn a solid fence into something rotted, leaning, and borderline unsafe. That's exactly what we were dealing with here in Maple Grove - a fence that had seen too many Minnesota winters and wasn't holding up anymore.
What made this one interesting is the style. This wasn't your standard wood privacy fence. The homeowner had a unique setup, and we built the replacement to match the character of the property while making sure it was actually structurally sound. Fresh pressure-treated wood posts, clean lumber, wire infill panels - the whole thing built to last.
A fence that's falling over isn't just an eyesore. It's a safety issue, especially if you have kids or pets using the yard. Getting it replaced means you're not spending the season looking at something that's one good windstorm away from being on the ground.
We do a lot of wood fence work, and one thing that separates a fence that holds up from one that doesn't is how the posts are set. Solid post installation is everything. The rest of the build can be perfect, but if the posts aren't done right, you'll be back to square one sooner than you think. We don't cut corners on that part.