




Waterfront properties are only as good as the access they give you. If you're climbing over old boards, stepping around rotted wood, or just dealing with no real way down to the water - that's a problem we fix every day. This is exactly the kind of build that makes a property actually usable.
Here's what we were working with: a tidal riverfront spot that needed solid, ground-up construction to connect the upper deck level down to the water's edge. The terrain is unforgiving - mud, tidal movement, unstable ground. That's the reality of building in a coastal environment, and it's why material selection and structural planning matter so much.
We used pressure-treated lumber throughout. That's not a coincidence - it's the standard for anything going near saltwater or tidal mud. The framing is heavy, the posts are set to handle the kind of ground shift you get in these environments, and the staircase is built wide enough to actually use comfortably. Alongside this build, we also completed a separate dock landing platform on a calmer river stretch - clean decking, solid railing, and a mooring post set right at the water's edge.
What we ended up with is two functional waterfront structures that give their owners real, everyday access to the water. Whether it's fishing, boating, or just sitting at the edge of the river - that access changes how you use your property entirely. That's what good dock and deck construction actually delivers.
We do this work all along the coast - tidal rivers, inlets, residential lots with tricky grades. No two waterfront builds are exactly the same, and that's what keeps us sharp. If your property has a water access problem, we know how to solve it.