Decking in Tyldesley
Timber and composite decking supplied and fitted: raised decks, steps and balustrades built on solid subframes that stay level, safe and dry underneath. Around three miles from our Leigh base.
Decking for Tyldesley Gardens
Plenty of Tyldesley houses step down into the back garden, and that awkward drop is exactly what decking is good at. A deck built level with the back door turns the step-down into a feature, with the garden carrying on below. We fit timber and composite decking across M29, from terraced backs near the town centre to the bigger plots towards Shakerley, and being three miles up the road means site visits are easy to arrange.
We cover Tyldesley and the surrounding area: Shakerley, Mosley Common, Gin Pit and beyond (M29).
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What’s Included
The build is the same wherever the boards go: a solid subframe on proper pads, membrane underneath, and boards fixed with the right screws rather than whatever is in the van. Steps, handrails and split levels are all part of the job, and we take the old deck away if we are replacing one.
- 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 Tyldesley, FAQs
Often more so. In a small garden a deck makes one corner properly usable instead of splitting the space into slivers of lawn and path. A neat 3m by 3m deck seats a table and four chairs comfortably, and composite boards keep it smart with no upkeep.
A straightforward single-level deck is typically two to three days. Split levels, balustrades or awkward access add a day or so. We confirm the timescale in the written quote so you know before we start.
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.
Any surface grows algae in a shaded, damp spot. Grooved boards help, composite ranges with textured finishes help more, and an annual wash keeps either surface safe. If the deck is going somewhere that never sees sun, tell us and we will spec the boards accordingly.