Pressure-treated wood deck construction
A classic, budget-friendly material for new deck builds - pressure-treated pine is a proven choice for homeowners who prefer a natural wood surface.
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You want a deck that handles Piedmont summers without warping, splintering, or demanding a staining weekend every spring. Trex composite decking gives you exactly that.

Trex deck installation in Asheboro means replacing or building a deck with Trex composite boards on a structural pressure-treated frame, delivering a surface that resists rot, splinters, and fading - most decks in the 300 to 400 square foot range are completed in two to five days once the permit and materials are in place.
Many homeowners in Asheboro reach this decision after years of refinishing a wood deck every couple of seasons, only to watch it look weathered again by fall. Asheboro's Piedmont summers are genuinely hard on outdoor wood - the humidity, the heat cycles, and the afternoon thunderstorms from June through September create exactly the wet-dry pattern that composite decking was built to ignore. If you have been putting off dealing with your deck, this is the upgrade that ends that cycle for good.
If you are still deciding between materials, take a look at our composite deck installation page, which covers the broader range of composite options available.
Press the heel of your shoe into a few spots on your deck surface, especially near the house and around the posts. If any boards give slightly or feel spongy, that is rot - and in Asheboro's humid summers, it spreads faster than most homeowners expect. A soft board today often means a dangerous board by next season.
Wood that has not been sealed in several years turns gray and develops small cracks along the grain. Those cracks produce splinters that make the deck uncomfortable for kids and pets. If your family is avoiding the deck because of it, that is a clear sign the surface needs to go.
If you have had your wood deck professionally stained more than twice and it still looks weathered within a season, the wood itself has likely degraded past the point where surface treatments help. West-facing decks in Asheboro are especially prone to this - afternoon sun in the Piedmont breaks down wood finishes faster than most product labels suggest.
Stand at the edge of your deck and check where it connects to your home. If you can see a gap between the ledger board and the house, or if the deck moves slightly when you walk near the edge, the structural connection has been compromised. That is a safety issue worth addressing before your next gathering.
Every Trex deck installation we build starts with a properly designed structural frame - pressure-treated posts, beams, and joists sized and spaced correctly for the load. The Trex boards go on top of that frame using either face-fasteners or a hidden fastener system, depending on the product line and your preference. We handle Trex's full range, from the entry-level Enhance line to the premium Transcend series, so you can match the look and budget that makes sense for your home. Where it fits the project, we also pair Trex decking with pressure-treated wood deck construction techniques for the framing to keep costs reasonable without cutting corners on structure.
Beyond the deck surface, we install Trex railings, stairs, fascia boards, and post caps as part of a complete job. We also pull the Randolph County building permit on your behalf and coordinate the framing inspection so you do not have to manage that process yourself. If you are replacing an old wood deck, demolition and haul-away are included.
Best for homeowners removing an aging wood deck and starting fresh with a low-maintenance composite surface.
Ideal for homes that do not yet have a deck - we design and build from scratch, including footings, framing, and the finished surface.
For elevated decks or multi-level layouts where matching composite railings and safe stair access are part of the plan.
Asheboro's Piedmont climate is one of the main reasons homeowners here keep coming back to composite decking. The repeated wet-dry cycles that come with hot, humid summers and occasional ice storms are exactly what wears wood down fastest. Trex boards are engineered to handle that pattern without warping, cupping, or cracking - so what you install today will look the same in year ten as it did on day one. Many homes in Asheboro were built in the 1960s and 1970s, and if your home is in that range, there is a good chance the original deck frame will need to be inspected and possibly replaced when the old surface comes off. We check for that as a standard part of every estimate visit, so there are no surprises mid-project.
We serve homeowners across the Asheboro area, including in Mebane and Randleman, where the same Piedmont soil and climate conditions apply. Randolph County requires a building permit for any deck attached to your home, and the permit process includes a framing inspection before the decking boards can go down. We handle all of that on your behalf - from the application to scheduling the inspector's visit.
We respond within one business day. Our first conversation covers the basics - approximate deck size, whether it is a replacement or new build, and your timeline. No commitment required at this stage.
We visit your yard to measure the space, assess the existing structure if there is one, and walk through your Trex color and railing options. You will leave with a written estimate that breaks down materials and labor.
Once you approve the estimate, we submit the Randolph County building permit application and finalize your Trex product selections. Permit approval typically takes one to two weeks - we keep you updated throughout.
The crew builds the frame, we coordinate the county framing inspection, then the Trex boards and railings go on. We do a final walkthrough with you before we leave, covering care instructions and warranty details.
Free estimate, no obligation. We respond within one business day.
(336) 628-7099We pull the building permit and schedule the Randolph County framing inspection as a standard part of every job. You never have to navigate the permit office yourself, and your finished deck has a passed county inspection on record.
The most common failure in composite deck installations is a poorly built frame, not the Trex boards. We size joists correctly, flash the ledger board where it meets your house, and verify every footing goes below the clay zone - so the deck stays solid for the long haul.
Asheboro's red clay soil expands and contracts with rainfall, and footings that are not deep enough will shift over time. We have worked on Randolph County properties long enough to know what the ground here does, and we size and set footings accordingly.
Trex makes several product lines at different price points, and choosing the right one for your home, budget, and HOA guidelines matters. We help you compare options honestly - not just push the most expensive board. You can also verify our state licensing status on the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors website before you sign anything.
Every Trex project we take on comes with a written estimate, a pulled permit, and a county-inspected frame. That combination is how we protect you and how we stand behind the work after we leave.
A classic, budget-friendly material for new deck builds - pressure-treated pine is a proven choice for homeowners who prefer a natural wood surface.
Learn MoreWe install a full range of composite decking brands beyond Trex - explore all your low-maintenance material options here.
Learn MoreDeck builders in Randolph County book up fast in spring - reach out now to hold your spot on the schedule.