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Full Landscape Install Brings Privacy and Polish to Spring Hill Home

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This was a full landscape install at a newer home in Spring Hill - the kind of job where the yard starts as a blank slate and ends as something the homeowner actually wants to spend time in. We handled everything from the privacy screening along the fence lines to the foundation planting beds out front. A lot of moving parts, but that's exactly what we plan for.

The big feature here is the arborvitae screening. We planted a long run of them along the back and side fence lines, tightly spaced so they fill in fast and create a solid green wall. Spring Hill is growing fast - new construction is literally going up next door in some of these shots - and that kind of neighbor activity is exactly why privacy screening matters. Nobody wants to feel like they're in a fishbowl in their own backyard.

Out front, we put in a layered foundation bed with a mix of broadleaf shrubs, boxwoods, and golden-tipped dwarf conifers. Mixing plant types like that does two things - it adds visual depth, and it means something is looking good in every season. The beds are freshly cut in with clean soil lines, ready for mulch to lock everything in.

On the side of the house, we installed a large-format tile pathway that runs the length of the building. It's a practical addition - gives you a clean, dry surface to walk on rather than trampling grass against the foundation - but it also looks sharp. The tile color pairs well with the brick, and the clean edge where it meets the turf keeps the whole thing looking intentional.

A job like this takes real coordination - grading prep, tree placement, planting bed layout, hardscape work, and sod all happening across the same property. We've done enough of these in the Spring Hill and greater Williamson County area to know how to sequence the work so nothing gets torn up twice. The result is a yard that functions well and looks finished from every angle.