Cedar wood deck construction
Cedar offers natural rot resistance and a warm, attractive appearance - a premium natural wood alternative to pressure-treated pine.
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A solid pressure-treated wood deck adds real, usable outdoor space to your home. We build them to handle Asheboro's climate, permitted and inspected so there are no surprises down the road.

Pressure-treated wood deck construction in Asheboro means building a complete outdoor deck using lumber that has been treated to resist rot, fungal decay, and insects - most standard single-level decks are completed in two to five days once the Randolph County permit is approved and materials are on site.
Pressure-treated pine is the most cost-effective material for a new deck, and in Asheboro's climate it performs well when it is built correctly and maintained regularly. If your back door opens onto bare ground or a small concrete stoop, a pressure-treated deck is typically the fastest path to an outdoor space your family will actually use. Asheboro's spring and fall weather - mild temperatures and long evenings - makes that kind of outdoor space genuinely worth having.
If you are weighing wood against a no-maintenance option, our custom deck design and build page covers how we approach material selection for any project, including composite alternatives.
Walk across your deck and press firmly on the boards with your foot, especially near the house and around any posts. If boards flex more than they should or feel soft, that is rot working through the wood. In Asheboro's humid summers, this kind of decay spreads faster than homeowners expect - and a soft board today is often a sign the framing underneath has been compromised too.
Push on your deck railing with both hands. If it moves more than slightly, or if a post is visibly no longer plumb, the structure has weakened. This is especially common on older Asheboro homes where decks were built in the 1990s or early 2000s and have never been replaced. A wobbly railing seems minor until someone leans on it at the wrong moment.
If your back door opens onto bare ground or a small stoop, you are likely not using your outdoor space the way you could. A deck turns that area into somewhere your family actually spends time. This is the most common reason homeowners in Asheboro start the conversation with us.
Decks built in the 1990s and early 2000s used older wood treatments and fasteners that can corrode and degrade faster than modern materials. If your deck is in that age range and you have not had it inspected, it is worth having a contractor take a look before the next season of regular use.
Every pressure-treated deck we build starts with properly set footings dug to the correct depth for Randolph County's soil and frost conditions. We use modern, code-compliant hardware throughout - galvanized post bases, joist hangers, and stainless fasteners that resist corrosion in Asheboro's humid climate. The deck boards, railings, and stairs are framed and fastened with the kind of spacing and detailing that prevents warping and buckling through the first summer's heat cycles. If you want to compare material options before committing to wood, we also offer full cedar wood deck construction as an alternative natural wood choice with better natural rot resistance than pressure-treated pine.
We handle the complete project from permit application through final walkthrough. That means we submit the Randolph County permit paperwork, coordinate the county's framing inspection, and stay on site through final cleanup. For homeowners replacing an old deck, demolition and debris removal are part of the job.
For homes that do not yet have a deck - we design, permit, and build from footings through the finished surface.
For homeowners removing an old, deteriorated deck and starting fresh with a properly built new structure.
For elevated decks where code-compliant railings and safe stair access are required as part of the build.
Asheboro's summer humidity stays high for months, and the Piedmont's red clay soil drains slowly and shifts with seasonal moisture changes. Both of those factors affect how a deck needs to be built here. Boards need to be spaced to allow for expansion and contraction. Footings need to sit deep enough that clay movement during wet winters will not shift the structure. And the wood needs to be properly graded and acclimated to this climate, not just whatever is available at the lumber yard. We have been building decks on Randolph County properties long enough that this is just standard practice for us.
We serve homeowners throughout the Asheboro area, including in Trinity and Archdale, where the same clay soil and permit requirements apply. Spring is the busiest season for deck projects in this area, and the most in-demand local contractors book out four to eight weeks by March. If you want your deck ready for summer, reaching out in late winter gives you the best shot at your preferred build date.
We respond within one business day. The conversation covers the basics - size, location, whether it is a new build or replacement, and your timeline. No commitment at this stage, just information.
We visit your property to measure, assess the ground conditions, and walk through design options with you. You leave with a written estimate that breaks down both materials and labor - not just a single total number.
Once you approve the estimate and sign a contract, we submit the Randolph County permit application. Approval can take a few days to a few weeks depending on the season - we factor that into your timeline from the start.
The crew builds the frame, the county inspector approves it, and then decking boards, railings, and stairs go on. We do a final walkthrough before we leave, including care instructions - particularly the three-to-six-month wait before applying any stain or sealant to new wood.
Free written estimate, no obligation. We respond within one business day.
(336) 628-7099We submit the Randolph County permit application and coordinate the framing inspection as a standard part of every project. Your finished deck has a passed county inspection on record - which protects you when you sell and with your homeowner's insurance.
Asheboro's red clay soil expands and contracts seasonally, and footings set too shallow will shift over time. We dig to the correct depth for local frost and soil conditions and size them properly for the deck's load - so the structure stays solid through every winter.
We provide written estimates that break down materials and labor separately. You know exactly what you are paying for before a single board is cut. No single lump-sum quotes, no surprise additions at the end of the project.
We have been building decks on residential properties in and around Asheboro since 2019. You can verify our North Carolina contractor licensing status on the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors website before you sign anything. The American Wood Council DCA6 Deck Construction Guide sets the national standard for safe residential deck construction, and it is the benchmark we build to on every job.
A pressure-treated deck built correctly will serve your family for decades. Every project we take on is permitted, inspected, and backed by a written estimate - so you know exactly what you are getting before we start.
Cedar offers natural rot resistance and a warm, attractive appearance - a premium natural wood alternative to pressure-treated pine.
Learn MoreIf you want a fully custom layout, multi-level design, or built-in features, our custom deck design service covers the full range of possibilities.
Learn MoreSpring books fast - reach out now to lock in your build date before the season fills up.