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Where We Work

Fencing the Front Range.

Denver metro, the foothills, and the plains east and south of town. The fence doesn't change much from city to city — the ground under it does. Clay in one yard, gravel and rock in the next. Wind that flattens a privacy fence in Golden and barely moves one in Centennial. Permit desks that want a plan and permit desks that don't.

Pick your city. We'll tell you what we actually run into there.

Denver

City & County of Denver · 5,280 ft

Mile-high sun, expansive clay, and a zoning permit for anything over four feet — plus every fence in a historic district or along a designated parkway.

Fencing in Denver

Lakewood

Jefferson County · 5,656 ft

Jefferson County clay, foothills wind — and a permit rule that catches almost everybody, because in Lakewood even a repair can need one.

Fencing in Lakewood

Arvada

Jefferson & Adams Counties · 5,525 ft

The strictest permit desk on our map — every fence needs one, regardless of height, and anything over six feet needs a wind rating.

Fencing in Arvada

Wheat Ridge

Jefferson County · 5,348 ft

The easiest permit desk on our map — and the one with the sharpest corner-lot rule, because the sight-distance triangle governs a lot of Wheat Ridge yards.

Fencing in Wheat Ridge

Golden

Jefferson County · 5,784 ft

The wind city. Golden's own building criteria design to a 150 mph ultimate wind speed and a 36-inch frost depth — that's not marketing, that's code.

Fencing in Golden

Littleton

Arapahoe County · ≈5,400 ft

Every fence needs a permit here — and the permit application asks for your post depth. Littleton is a repair-and-replace town.

Fencing in Littleton

Centennial

Arapahoe County · ≈5,700 ft

Around 200 HOAs mapped inside the city limits, fencing is a licensed trade here, and the permit trigger isn't height — it's what you change.

Fencing in Centennial

Parker

Douglas County · ≈5,900 ft

Chain-link is prohibited in Parker residential. Front-of-house caps at 42 inches. And the bedrock under Douglas County swells when it gets wet.

Fencing in Parker

Castle Rock

Douglas County · 6,224 ft

Highest town on our map at 6,224 feet, sitting on the windy Palmer Divide — and full of builder-grade cedar that's hitting the end of its life.

Fencing in Castle Rock

Boulder

Boulder County · ≈5,400 ft

The city's own building code sets a 150 to 165 mph design wind gust. Then there's the wildfire rule. Boulder is the hardest fence environment we work.

Fencing in Boulder

Same four fences, everywhere we go

What changes city to city is the ground, the wind, and the paperwork. What doesn't change is the build: posts below the frost line, real concrete footers, and a string line on every run.

Don't see your town?

We work the whole Front Range — foothills to plains. If you're near one of these, we can get to you.