Decking in Hindley
Timber and composite decking supplied and fitted: raised decks, steps and balustrades built on solid subframes that stay level, safe and dry underneath. Around four miles from our Leigh base.
Decking for Hindley Gardens
Hindley’s older streets come with older gardens: yards that were concreted decades ago, ground that has settled unevenly, and levels that make paving a bigger job than it looks. Decking deals with all of that from above. The frame takes up the bumps and falls, and the boards give you a level surface without breaking out what is underneath. We build timber and composite decks across Hindley and Hindley Green.
We cover Hindley and the surrounding area: Hindley Green, Castle Hill, Amberswood, Lowe Mill, Ladies Lane and beyond (WN2).
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What’s Included
Every frame gets a membrane underneath and clear airflow through it, and where a deck sits low to the ground we mesh the openings so nothing sets up home under there. Boards, steps and rails to suit, old decking and debris taken away, and the garden left tidy.
- Treated timber decking, supplied and fitted
- Composite decking in a range of colours and finishes
- Raised and split-level decks for sloped gardens
- Steps, balustrades and handrails built in
- Solid subframes with membrane and airflow underneath
- Old decking removed and taken away
How It Works
Decking in Hindley, FAQs
Usually yes, and it saves the cost and mess of breaking it out. The posts pack up off the sound concrete and the frame levels everything above it. We check the slab drains properly first so water is not trapped under the deck.
They can under any low deck if it is left open, so we do not leave it open. Low frames get galvanised mesh around the perimeter, tight board gaps and no food-trap voids. Airflow stays, wildlife does not.
It comes down to budget and appetite for upkeep. Treated timber is cheaper to buy and easy to repair, but needs a clean and re-oil every year or two to stay looking good. Composite costs more up front and then more or less looks after itself. In shaded gardens where timber greens over fast, composite is usually worth the extra.
Yes, and that is where decking beats paving hands down. The frame takes up the slope, so you get a perfectly level surface without moving tonnes of soil. Split-level decks with a step or two between them work well on steeper plots.
Usually not. Decking under 30cm off the ground and covering less than half the garden generally falls under permitted development. Raised decks above that can need permission, and conservation areas have their own rules. We flag it at the quote if your job needs a check.