Outdoor Living Spaces for Tualatin's Growing Neighborhoods
Tualatin sits right along the I-5 corridor between Wilsonville and Tigard, making it one of the most conveniently located cities in our service area — about 20 minutes from our Woodburn base. The city straddles the line between business hub and residential community, with large employers clustered along Tualatin-Sherwood Road and family neighborhoods spreading outward from the Tualatin Commons waterfront district.
The Tualatin Commons area anchors the city center, with a man-made lake surrounded by restaurants, shops, and nearby residential streets. Homes within walking distance of the Commons tend to be newer construction from the 2000s and 2010s, with contemporary floor plans and outdoor spaces designed for entertaining. The Martinazzi neighborhood, south of the commons along Martinazzi Avenue, features a mix of single-family homes and townhomes where homeowners want functional outdoor spaces that maximize their lot's usable area.
West Tualatin, stretching toward Sherwood along Tualatin-Sherwood Road, includes some of the city's newest developments. These neighborhoods have been built within the last decade, and many homeowners are still working on their outdoor spaces — moving beyond the basic sod-and-fence that the builder left behind. The Tualatin River runs along the city's northern edge, and properties near the river and its tributaries face specific drainage and setback considerations that influence landscape design.
Tualatin's Unique Landscape Considerations
Tualatin's position on the valley floor alongside the Tualatin River means high water tables and flat terrain throughout most of the city. The alluvial clay soil holds water like a sponge, and without adequate drainage infrastructure, backyards here can stay waterlogged well into May. We address this on every Tualatin project with a combination of French drains, grading adjustments, and permeable materials under hardscaped surfaces.
The Tualatin River floodplain affects properties within a few blocks of the waterway. Clean Water Services manages the sensitive area regulations here, which can restrict construction within buffer zones. For properties near the river or its tributaries (including Hedges Creek and Nyberg Creek), we verify setback requirements during the design phase and recommend native riparian plantings — red osier dogwood, Oregon ash, and native sedges — that satisfy regulatory requirements while adding beauty to the river-adjacent landscape.
Tualatin's newer developments present a different challenge: builder-grade landscaping that was installed to meet minimum standards, not to create an outdoor living space. Many of these homes have compacted fill soil under thin sod, no drainage system, and concrete patios that are already cracking after a few years. Upgrading these yards to proper outdoor spaces requires remediation — removing failing concrete, amending the soil, installing drainage, and building everything correctly from the ground up.
What We Build for Tualatin Homeowners
From builder-grade upgrades to full outdoor living builds, here is what Tualatin residents request most.
Paver Patios and Walkways
Replace cracking builder-grade concrete with custom pavers — built on a proper base with drainage that actually handles Tualatin's wet conditions.
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Complete Landscape Builds
Full outdoor transformations — from bare dirt or builder-grade yards to finished landscapes with planting, sod, mulch, and hardscaping.
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Turf Installation
End the seasonal mud cycle — artificial turf drains well, stays green, and eliminates the soggy-lawn problem Tualatin yards are known for.
Learn moreWe also provide retaining walls, landscape design, lawn care, mulch installation, tree trimming, irrigation systems, clean-up services, and snow removal throughout Tualatin.
Questions From Tualatin Homeowners
Tualatin sits on flat valley-floor terrain with heavy clay soil and a high water table, especially near the Tualatin River. When the rainy season hits in October, that clay becomes saturated quickly and has nowhere to shed water on flat lots. Without French drains, proper grading, or permeable surfaces, yards pool and stay soggy through spring. We design drainage solutions specific to Tualatin's conditions — typically a combination of perimeter French drains, surface grading at 2 percent minimum slope, and gravel bases under any hardscaping.
This is one of our most common Tualatin projects. Builder-grade concrete patios are typically thin, poured on minimal base, and already showing cracks within a few years. We demolish the old concrete, excavate and regrade the area, install a proper compacted gravel base with drainage, and lay custom pavers. The result is a patio that looks better, lasts longer, and handles Tualatin's water conditions without pooling or settling.
Properties near the Tualatin River and its tributaries may fall within Clean Water Services sensitive area buffers, which restrict hard surfaces and require native plantings within certain distances of the waterway. The buffer width depends on the slope and vegetation type. We check these requirements during our free estimate and design landscapes that comply with all environmental regulations while maximizing your usable yard space.
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