
Aerial of Cottonwood Heights Utah
Explore tailored Construction expertise for homes and businesses in Cottonwood Heights.
Deck Builders in Cottonwood Heights - Our Project Impact
Pitt Landscape is actively building deck builders experience in Cottonwood Heights, with project activity continuing to grow in this area.
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Deck Builders in Cottonwood Heights
Professional Deck Builders Services in Cottonwood Heights. Crafted decks for outdoor living—Pitt Landscaping brings visions to life. Our crews tailor each project to local site conditions, property goals, and the long-term performance expectations for Cottonwood Heights.

Four‑Season Living at the Foothills
With hot, dry summers and snowy winters, Cottonwood Heights experiences all four seasons. Residents head up the nearby canyons for hiking, biking and skiing, so outdoor spaces need to be flexible. Our Construction solutions are tailored to this lifestyle: we install durable hardscapes and drainage to handle seasonal runoff, add shade structures and fire features for year‑round comfort, and design landscapes that echo the mountain setting while conserving water.
Custom Deck Construction by a Licensed General Contractor
A deck is a permitted structural addition to your home. In Utah, decks over 30 inches above grade require a building permit, engineered footings, and inspections — and that work must be done by or under the supervision of a licensed contractor. At Pitt Landscape & Construction, we hold a Utah B-100 General Contractor license and handle deck projects from structural design through permit through final inspection.
We have completed 21 deck projects across the Salt Lake Valley representing $606,000 in installed work, with an average project value of $17,817. These are custom builds — designed for each site, engineered for the load requirements, and built to last through Utah's seasonal extremes. They are not template-kit installations.
Deck Materials: Wood, Composite, and What Works in Utah
Material choice affects how your deck looks, how much maintenance it requires, and how it holds up over time in Utah's climate.
Pressure-treated lumber is the most common structural material for framing, posts, joists, and beams regardless of what decking surface you choose. It handles ground contact and moisture without rotting. All structural members are pressure-treated regardless of the decking surface above.
Cedar and redwood decking have a natural, warm look that composite cannot fully replicate. They require periodic cleaning, sealing, and staining to maintain appearance and prevent checking (surface cracking from UV exposure). In Utah's dry, high-UV environment, untreated cedar will grey and check faster than in more humid climates.
Composite decking (Trex, TimberTech, Fiberon) requires virtually no maintenance beyond cleaning. It does not splinter, does not need staining, and holds its color well. Premium composites are capped on all sides, which prevents moisture absorption and resists Utah's freeze-thaw cycles. Cost is higher upfront; maintenance cost over 10–15 years is significantly lower.
Hardwood decking (Ipe, mahogany, cumaru) is the premium natural option — extremely dense, resistant to UV and moisture, long-lasting. Requires oiling rather than staining. Material cost is substantially higher than cedar or composite.
Deck Design: Structure, Railings, and Integrated Features
The structural decisions made at the design stage determine everything that happens after — footing size and depth, beam spans, joist spacing, and how the ledger attaches to the house. We produce structural drawings before permit submission and review them against the site conditions: soil type, frost depth, and the load the deck will carry (including snow load, which is a real factor in Utah).
Beyond structure, the features that get designed into the deck at this stage include: Railings — cable rail for open views, aluminum balusters for low maintenance, wood rails for traditional look. Utah code requires railings on decks 30 inches or more above grade. Built-in seating and planters — integrated benches along the perimeter eliminate the need for movable furniture and define the space. Lighting — post cap lights, riser lights, and under-rail lighting all require electrical rough-in during framing. Stair placement — where stairs land matters for how the deck connects to the yard below, which is especially important when the deck is part of a larger landscape installation.
Permitting, Inspections, and HOA Requirements
Most attached decks in Utah require a building permit. The permit process involves submitting structural drawings, getting plan approval, scheduling a footing inspection before concrete is poured, and a final inspection after the build is complete. In Draper, Sandy, South Jordan, Murray, and most Salt Lake Valley cities, this process takes 2–6 weeks depending on current city workload.
As a licensed GC, Pitt Landscape & Construction manages the entire permit process. We produce the drawings, submit to the city, schedule inspections, and handle any plan check comments. You are not responsible for navigating the building department. For HOA-governed properties, we review the CC&Rs before design is finalized and prepare the HOA submission package — material samples, elevations, and site plan — when required.
An unpermitted deck is a liability at resale. Buyers' inspectors flag them, lenders sometimes require remediation, and the cost to retroactively permit work that was not built to code can exceed the original construction cost. Build it right, build it permitted.
Deck Cost in the Salt Lake Valley
Deck cost in Utah depends on size, material, height above grade (which affects footing requirements and stair complexity), and whether the project includes surrounding landscape work.
Pressure-treated wood deck (16×20 ft, ground level to moderate height): $18,000–$28,000
Cedar or composite deck (same size): $24,000–$38,000
Premium composite or hardwood deck (TimberTech, Ipe, cable rail, lighting): $35,000–$65,000+
Multi-level deck with stairs and integrated seating: $40,000–$80,000+
These ranges include permit, footings, framing, decking, railings, and standard stairs. They do not include surrounding landscape, grading, or retaining structures that are often part of a full project. Our average deck project value is $17,817 as a standalone scope; combined with landscape work, the total project value is typically higher.
Starting Your Deck Project in Cottonwood Heights
Every deck project at Pitt Landscape & Construction begins with a design consultation at your Cottonwood Heights property. We assess your home's existing structure (ledger attachment point, existing grade, drainage), discuss your goals for the space, and produce structural drawings before any work begins. Permit submission and inspection management are included.
Contact us to schedule your Cottonwood Heights deck consultation. We serve communities across Salt Lake, Utah, Davis, and Summit counties — Sandy, Draper, South Jordan, Murray, Riverton, Herriman, Salt Lake City, Bountiful, Park City, and surrounding areas.
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