




This one started with bare dirt and debris across the entire front yard - no grass, no structure, just raw exposed ground that needed a complete overhaul. That's exactly the kind of job we love. When a lawn is this far gone, there's no patching it. You have to start fresh and do it right.
Here's what the full scope looked like: 2,100 square feet of sod laid across the front yard, fresh front landscaping with new mulch beds along the foundation, and 50 yards of topsoil seeded and covered with hay for the areas that didn't get sod. That combination gives you instant green where it matters most, plus solid seed coverage everywhere else.
The foundation beds got a complete refresh too - dark mulch, flowering plants near the entry, and clean defined edges that frame the front of the house. It's the kind of detail that ties the whole yard together and makes the finished result feel intentional, not just functional.
A job like this is really three things at once - lawn care, landscape bed work, and a partial seeding - and getting all three to look cohesive takes planning. We prep the soil properly before anything goes down, because sod and seed both fail fast if the ground underneath isn't ready. Fifty yards of topsoil is a serious investment in getting that base right.
The difference between bare dirt and a finished yard like this is hard to overstate from a curb appeal standpoint. The house was always nice - it just needed the yard to match it.