Pleasant View shares the same foothill bench as North Ogden, and Felter Landscape works just up the road. The higher you climb here the bigger the views and the steeper the lots get, which is exactly the terrain our boulder work and grading were built for.
Pleasant View tucks into the hillside north of Ogden, with many of its newer estate-style homes set high on the bench where the grade is most dramatic and the panoramas over the valley are widest. Soils carry the same foothill clay and rock as North Ogden, with more exposed stone the further up the slope you go. Larger lots up here often come with long driveway frontage and big retaining needs, since the land was carved into the hillside to build on. Sitting in Zone 6b around 4,600 feet, it gets the full hot-dry-summer, cold-winter swing, and wind can pick up on the exposed upper lots.
Boulder walls and multi-level terracing for the carved-in hillside estate lots
Paver patios positioned to capture the wide valley panoramas from the upper bench
Sprinkler systems tuned for exposed, wind-prone slopes that dry out fast
What we build in Pleasant View
Pleasant View landscaping questions
Our Pleasant View lot has big elevation changes. Is hardscape realistic?
It is, and it is usually the point. Carved hillside lots up here are ideal for stepped paver patios and CMHA-certified retaining, which create a few flat outdoor rooms at different levels instead of one steep, unusable yard.
Why does my upper-bench yard dry out so quickly?
Exposure and wind. The high lots in Pleasant View catch sun and breeze off the foothills, which pulls moisture from the soil fast. We design sprinkler zones around that, often with separate heads for the windward side, so water lands where it is needed instead of blowing past.
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Free consultation, 3D design, and a fixed quote before any work begins.
