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Landscape
Contractors in Houston Texas
It’s a common
dilemma: you have an outdoor project and you don’t know whether
to use landscape contractors or to do it yourself. Are landscape
contractors worth the expense? What value do they add? How do I
determine which landscape contractors are competent? Where do I
start?
Landscape Contractors: An Overview
Landscape contractors bring to the table an understanding of the
plans and documents that the
landscape designers
and
architects have prepared. They understand the proper
terminology. They know the tradesmen and subcontractors who can
do excellent work. They organize the workflow. They turn the
ideas into a practical and coherent reality.
For landscape contractors, this project management is the skill
that proves their real worth. In general, the more complex the
project, the more important it is to have a single experienced
professional overseeing the job. If nothing else, it eliminates
the finger-pointing when conflicts arise. You then only have one
person to deal with.
Many landscape contractors are often further engaged to handle
the ongoing
landscape maintenance of
the projects they install. This long-term partnership benefits
the homeowners because they can be assured that the integrity of
the overall design will be maintained—for example, when a
particular style of garden has been chosen: a
formal landscape design
with its meticulous attention to line and form or a
Mediterranean garden design
that gets much of its style from plant choices.
What to Know Before Talking to Landscape Contractors
There are several issues you will want to understand for
yourself before interviewing landscape contractors. They
include:
• Deciding how you want the landscape to be used. Will you
entertain? Do you have children and therefore want a play area?
Would a swimming pool be a
worthwhile investment?
• What services do you want? Consider design or architectural
services, plant and material choices and construction.
• Will you care for the landscape yourself or do you want to
hire out the ongoing landscape maintenance?
Questions to ask Landscape Contractors
Once you have a general idea of the project you want to
undertake, you are ready to talk to the landscape contractors.
Here is a short list of questions to ask:
• How long has the firm been in business? Has it always been in
this part of the country? The answers give you an idea of their
knowledge of the Houston area’s particular climate and
environmental conditions.
• Does the firm intend to use subcontractors? If so, how long
have they been working together?
• Request proof of insurance for liability and workers'
compensation. Ask what local licenses and permits will be
required.
• Ask for references.
• Ask to see a portfolio of completed projects. It might even be
informative to visit a project that’s in the works, something
that will give you a good idea of what the crews and their work
habits look like.
• Request the bid in writing. Professional firms will have
written estimates and contracts that include the scope of work,
estimated time of completion, total costs, payment methods,
warranties and possibly dispute resolutions.
• Is the contractor professional? This last question is really
one that you’ll ask yourself after your initial impression, and
it’s an important one—is this person someone you want to do
business with?
The Value-Added of Landscape Contractors
The true value that landscape contractors provide can be summed
up in two words: construction management. It entails the
implementation of the project’s requirements in the correct
sequence, which is integral to a successful installation. The
list may include:
• Site grading
•
Landscape installation
• Tree planting,
tree preservation, tree
trimming or removal
• Landscape
drainage systems
installation
•
Irrigation systems
•
Hardscapes (driveways, sidewalks, patios, walls,
gates, fences)
•
Outdoor kitchens
•
Luxury swimming pools
• Outdoor
water fountains
•
Landscape lighting
Many homeowners mistakenly think that a landscape project is
just as simple as putting the different parts into a logical
order—get the pool done, then call in the lighting guys, for
example. However, in most cases, one piece of the overall design
is rarely installed in its entirety at one time; rather, it is
installed in parts and starts with the subcontractor coming back
to the project several times before his part of the installation
is finished. In many cases, a single subcontractor may be called
back five different times to complete incremental steps leading
up to the completed installation.
“The different sections of a major landscape installation need
to be interwoven, very similar to how a dance is choreographed,”
explains Jeff Halper with Exterior Worlds. “The subcontractors
keep coming and going at different times, doing one step in
concert with ten others. For instance, before the pool
subcontractor pours the decking, you want to get the
electricians and the irrigation specialists out there. Otherwise
you’ll land-lock that beautiful planter that you had specially
built to mark the end of the pool area. You’ve left it stranded
without electricity for lights or plumbing for easy watering.
“We try to be frank with our clients as to where we can be most
valuable. If a customer only wants an arbor built, I may tell
them to just call the arbor builder. But if they want, say, the
arbor wired for landscape lighting and integrated into the
irrigation and drainage system—that’s another matter. Landscape
contractors, in particular, add value when you want the
hardscapes to relate to one another—the pool, the irrigation,
the outdoor kitchen, the drainage system, the lights, the whole
deal. The more sophisticated the design, the more important
landscape contractors become. In these cases, we become a
necessity, not a luxury.”
Since 1987, Exterior Worlds has been
successfully contracting landscape projects thought-out the
greater Houston area including the
Memorial Villages, Tanglewood, River Oaks, West University, Bellaire and the greater
Houston area.
Call
Exterior Worlds at
713-827-2255 to get an appointment .
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