
Every solid patio starts with a plan. Before a single paver gets set, we map out the full layout - dimensions, materials, patterns, transitions. That design phase is what separates a patio that looks right from one that actually works the way it should.
This Westfield project called for a main patio area paired with a connecting walkway. The patio runs 14 by 18 feet, framed by a clean border detail that gives the whole surface a finished, intentional look. The walkway ties it back to the house with a herringbone pattern - a classic choice that adds visual interest without overcomplicating things.
What you see in the rendering is exactly how we handed this off to the build crew. The scaled layout, the material selections, the transitions between the patio and surrounding landscape. Nothing gets left to guesswork on job day.
The prep work underneath is just as important as what you see on top. Proper base compaction, correct drainage slope, precise edging - that's what keeps a paver installation flat and stable for years. A patio that shifts or sinks after two winters wasn't built right from the start. We don't cut corners on the stuff you can't see.
From the initial design all the way through the finished install, this is how we approach paver patio work. Clean lines, strong structure, and a layout that makes sense for how the space actually gets used.