It started with a splinterâwell, more like a thousand little splintersâand a family who finally said, âenough is enough.â
1. The Project or Problem
When we first walked into this backyard in Avon, it was the kind of space that had all the potential in the world⊠but none of the comfort. The deck, once the pride of the home, had aged into something more like a cautionary tale. The boards were gray and cracked, warped just enough that the evening light caught each uneven edge. It was the kind of deck where you learned quickly to wear shoesâeven for a quick step outside to grab the dog.
The homeowners, Matt and Lisa, told us theyâd been putting off the decision for years. Their kids had grown up playing on this deck, and there was sentimental value in every creak and groan of the boards. But lately, they found themselves avoiding it entirely. Matt said he preferred standing in the driveway with his coffee because at least that concrete didnât threaten to stab him in the foot.
To make matters trickier, their backyard had a slight slope leading toward a stand of maples. It meant drainage had always been a problemâevery rainstorm left one corner damp for days. The existing deck design didnât handle it well; instead of a cozy outdoor room, they had a weather-worn rectangle that felt tacked onto the house.
2. The Discovery
When we started brainstorming, we remembered something weâd written on our Avon deck builder page. Weâd talked there about how good design isnât just about size or materialsâitâs about making a deck fit the life you actually live. Itâs a page full of practical ideas: how to work with a tricky slope, when to consider multi-level layouts, and how to think ahead about traffic flow from the kitchen to the grill to the garden gate.
For Matt and Lisa, that meant a shift. Instead of rebuilding the same single-level deck in the same footprint, we sketched an angled wrap that stepped down toward the yardâcreating a spot for morning coffee closer to the trees, but still dry and level thanks to hidden drainage solutions. Reading our own words back to them (âthe best deck is the one you can use all yearâ), we all agreed this project was about connection, not just replacement.
3. What It Made Us Think
This project reminded us of something we see all the time: homeowners often think the safest bet is to âjust rebuild whatâs there.â And while thatâs sometimes the right move, it can also trap you in the same frustrations youâve had for yearsâjust with new wood.
Matt and Lisaâs yard had been quietly telling a story: the slope wanted to be part of the design. The tree line wanted to be part of the view. The corner that always stayed damp wanted to be⊠something else entirely, not just the deckâs problem.
So we rethought the shape. Instead of one monolithic rectangle, we broke it into two connected platforms: one directly off the house for dining, the other a step down for lounging. Between them, we imagined a small set of wide stairs where the kids could sit with ice cream in summer. The damp corner? We left it open, filling it with gravel and potted evergreens, turning a flaw into a little green buffer.
Itâs funnyâreading our own Avon page had us nodding along like homeowners ourselves. We talk about designing for flow, sightlines, and seasonal change, but in practice, it can be easy to get caught up in the logistics of joists and railings. This time, those reminders brought us back to why people build decks in the first place: not for the structure, but for the moments it frames.
4. Small Wins, Lessons, or Plans
One of the small wins came from a last-minute material swap. Originally, Matt had wanted a warm cedar, but Lisa was worried about upkeep. We landed on a composite that echoed cedarâs color but promised decades without sanding or sealing. That choice freed them from the mental âmaintenance calendarâ theyâd been keeping for years.
We also decided to use cable railing along the side facing the trees. It kept the view wide open, letting the low morning sun spill across the deck instead of being blocked by thick posts. Underneath the lower section, we tucked in a hidden storage nook for folding chairs and garden toolsâbecause nothing ruins a summer evening like tripping over a hose.
Visualizing the finished space became a game between us. Lisa imagined string lights zigzagging between posts, Matt pictured a small fire table on the lower section, and the kids were already planning which corner would be âthe snack zone.â Even the dog was includedâhis water bowl would sit in the shaded lower step, away from where people walked.
Itâs not often you see a plan that feels right before a single board is cut, but this one did. Maybe because it wasnât about starting overâit was about finally listening to the space.
5. Wrap-Up / Reflection
Looking back, this project wasnât just a deck rebuild; it was a quiet reminder that every outdoor space has a personality. You can fight itâor you can lean in and let it shape the design.
For Matt and Lisa, leaning in meant a deck that worked with their slope, framed their view, and invited them outside instead of warning them away. It meant more than fixing splinters; it meant building a place that would age with them, not against them.
If youâre staring at a worn-out deck, itâs tempting to think only in terms of replacement. But maybeâjust maybeâyour backyardâs quirks are the best part of the plan you havenât drawn yet.
HASHTAGS: #BackyardGoals #AvonHomes #DeckDesign #OutdoorVibes #NeighborhoodNotes #NaturalSpaces #GardenPlanning #DesignDetails #SouthShoreStyle












