Castle Pines, CO · Family-owned

Deck builder in Castle Pines, CO.

Custom decks built for Castle Pines — clay soil, strong mountain sun, heavy snow, and your design review. Built by Jon & Janessa Lang.

BBB Accredited Licensed & Insured TimberTech & Deckorators Pro
4.9 Google rating 196+ projects completed BBB Accredited business Family-owned & operated Permits & design review handled
Cable-rail composite deck in Castle Pines with a Front Range view

Built for Castle Pines

A Castle Pines deck isn't a Denver deck.

We've built from the city streets of Castle Pines North to the gated estates in the Village — and the ground up here doesn't forgive shortcuts. Castle Pines sits at about 6,400 feet, up in the ponderosa pines, on clay that swells up when it gets wet, under strong mountain sun and some of the worst hail in the country.

Decks fail here in the same three ways: the clay pushes the posts up and pulls the deck off the house, the sun fades and cracks cheap boards in two summers, and tall railings block the ridge view you moved up here for. We build so yours doesn't do any of those.

  • We dig the posts down deep, past the clay, to solid ground — so a wet spring can't push your deck up.
  • Low-maintenance composite (TimberTech and Deckorators), so you're not re-staining wood every couple summers up here.
  • Thin cable or metal railing on the ridge-top lots — so you keep your view from Pikes Peak to Mount Blue Sky.
  • Decks that step down to the yard on the walkout lots in Hidden Pointe and Castle Valley — not one tall deck you need a long flight of stairs to leave.
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Verified Google review

“After researching several local companies, they were the clear winner. The quality far exceeded the cost — craftsmanship in every square inch.”

Dale Maxey · Custom deck
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Built for Castle Pines conditions

The details that make a Castle Pines deck last.

Most deck failures here trace back to the soil, the sun, or a skipped permit. We build for all three.

Clay that lifts decks

The clay under Castle Pines swells up when it gets wet. That's what pushes a deck up and pulls it off the house. We dig the posts down deep to solid ground, so a wet spring can't lift it.

Snow and freeze-thaw

We size the frame for Castle Pines snow, and for the way it freezes cold at night and thaws by day at 6,400 feet. That back-and-forth slowly loosens the screws on a deck built for warmer places.

Strong sun & Hail Alley

Castle Pines sits at 6,400 feet right in Hail Alley, where the sun and hail are hard on wood. We use tougher boards and build covered decks for folks tired of fixing hail damage.

Permits & design review

If you're in the City of Castle Pines, a deck needs a city permit. If you're in the gated Village, the permit goes through Douglas County and the design review has to approve the plans first. We sort out which one your home is in and handle it.

Verified Google review

“The inspector was impressed by their system and mentioned this deck is built to withstand a hurricane.”

Dominic Valenzuela
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What we see in Castle Pines yards

The Castle Pines deck calls all start to rhyme.

After a few hundred Front Range builds, the requests from this town are predictable in the best way. Odds are yours is on this list — and we've already solved it.

Walkout-basement decks

Hidden Pointe, Castle Valley and The Canyons are full of walkout lots, where the main floor sits a full story above the backyard. We build decks that step down, level by level, to the yard — not one tall deck you need a long flight of stairs to get off of.

Saving the ridge view

On the ridge-top lots you can see all the way from Pikes Peak to Mount Blue Sky. We use thin cable or metal railing so the railing almost disappears — and the view doesn't.

Decks among the pines

Castle Pines is a real ponderosa-pine forest, so we lay out the deck around the big trees you want to keep and build for the shade and pine needles that come with them.

Done patching after the hail

If you've had to replace a roof or a deck board after a Castle Pines storm, you're not alone. We build covered decks, and use tougher boards, so the next big hail doesn't start it all over.

Design-review builds in the Village

In the gated Village, nothing gets built until the design review approves the plans, materials and colors. We've done that paperwork before and handle it for you.

Big walkout decks on acreage

Out on the bigger Hidden Pointe lots the decks are big — wrap-around, with a few separate areas, built for the wind off the open space and the snow that comes with the higher ground.

Verified Google reviews

4.9 stars across 196+ projects.

Real, verified reviews from real Colorado yards — the same names come up again and again: Jon, Janessa, and a crew that takes pride in the details.

Verified Google review

“They tore out our very old deck and built a new, much bigger one. They started exactly when they said and showed up every day on time. Our new deck is AWESOME — love the TimberTech too.”

BK
Ben Kramer
Deck tear-out & rebuild
Verified Google review

“We had Jon, Andrew, and Derrick rebuild our deck. The crew was always on time and professional. Jon designed a creative privacy wall for us and delivered on all his promises. We enjoy it every day!”

ZS
Ziba Shahgodari
Deck rebuild + privacy wall
Verified Google review

“We chose a picture-frame design with black railing. Jon was very easy to work with and always on time. Very happy! Would do business again with him and highly recommend them.”

RL
Ryan LaScala
Picture-frame deck

Where we build in Castle Pines

Decks across every Castle Pines neighborhood.

From the city streets of Castle Pines North to the gated estates in the Village. A few of the neighborhoods we work in:

Castle Pines deck questions

What homeowners ask us.

Do I need a permit for a deck in Castle Pines?
Yes. If your home is in the City of Castle Pines, a deck needs a city permit from the city's building office (303-705-0227). If you're in the gated Village, the permit goes through Douglas County (303-660-7497) instead. We find out which one your home is in and pull the right permit, plus the inspections.
Does the Village design review have to approve it?
If you live in the gated Village at Castle Pines, yes. The Castle Pines Homes Association Design Review Committee (303-814-1345) has to approve your deck plans, materials, and colors before any work starts. We fill out that paperwork for you.
How do you keep a Castle Pines deck from shifting in the clay?
The clay under Castle Pines swells up when it gets wet. We dig the posts down deep, past the clay, to solid ground, and seal the deck to the house the right way — so a wet spring doesn't push it up off the house.
What decking holds up best up here?
At 6,400 feet the strong sun and hail are hard on wood. We mostly use composite boards (TimberTech and Deckorators) that won't fade, crack, or splinter — or cedar if you want the natural wood look.
Can you protect my ridge view?
Yes. Thin cable or metal railing keeps your view from Pikes Peak to Mount Blue Sky open and still passes the rules. It's a big reason the ridge-top homeowners call us.
How long does a Castle Pines deck take?
Most decks here take one to three weeks to build, once the design is set and the city, county, or design review says yes. You get a real schedule up front and a crew that shows up when we said — that's behind a lot of our reviews.

Ready for a deck built for Castle Pines?

Get a free, itemized estimate from the owners. Most Castle Pines homeowners hear back the same day.

Get My Free Estimate or call (720) 712-4058
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