Decks & Outdoor Living in Cape Vincent, NY
Folks in Cape Vincent use their decks hard from spring through fall, and the ones right on the St. Lawrence take a beating from spray, sun and North Country winters. We build with frost-depth footings sized for river soil and corrosion-rated hardware so your Cape Vincent deck stays level and solid for the long haul. Whether it's a new waterfront build, a screened porch, or restaining a deck that's gone gray, we're based close by in Clayton and Kaleb's on-site for it.
Decks & Outdoor Living, the Cape Vincent way.
Properties out here catch real wind and water off the open lake, so exteriors, decks and waterproofing have to be done right the first time. We work on year-round homes in the village and cottages strung along the shoreline.
The lake weather sets the calendar. We get exterior and deck work done in the good-weather window and save interior jobs for the colder months.
New decks and porches in pressure-treated, cedar or composite Waterfront and riverfront builds with frost-depth footings sized for river soil Screened porches to keep the bugs off the water Pergolas, privacy screens and built-in seating Railings, stairs and deck lighting Corrosion-rated hardware for the spray and the freeze-thaw Deck repair, board replacement and restaining Pressure washing and re-coating tired decks Fully insured, Clayton-based, honest written quotes
Built for the river
Waterfront and riverfront builds are their own animal, and a deck crew that mostly works inland will get it wrong. The ground near the St. Lawrence shifts. There's clay, there's fill, there's ledge, and a deck on bad footings will heave the first hard winter. We set footings below the frost line and size them for the soil so your deck stays level for the long haul.
Wind and spray off the water are rough on hardware. We use corrosion-rated fasteners and connectors so your railings and joist hangers aren't rusting out in five years. We'll also think through grade, drainage and where the snow piles up, because North Country winters dump a lot of weight and the framing has to carry it.
We do dock-adjacent and shoreline deck work too, the kind that has to live with water levels and ice. If your build sits where the river can reach it, we plan for that instead of pretending the river behaves.
What it costs
A deck's price depends on size, height off the ground, the decking material, the railing system, and how tricky the site is. A simple ground-level wood deck and a multi-level composite build with cable rail on a sloped waterfront lot are not the same project, and we won't quote them like they are.
Composite runs more up front than wood, but you're buying years of no maintenance. Waterfront footings, stairs down a grade, and screened-in or roofed sections all add to it. The honest move is a written quote after we've seen your spot. What you get from us is a clear number with the line items spelled out, never a vague range and a surprise at the end.
More on our decks & outdoor living across the Thousand Islands →
Decks & Outdoor Living in Cape Vincent: common questions
How much does a new deck cost in the Thousand Islands?
It depends on size, height, material and the site. Wood costs less to build than composite, while waterfront footings, stairs down a slope, and screened or roofed sections add to it. We give you a written quote with the line items spelled out after we've walked your property, not a guess over the phone.
Should I build a composite or a wood deck?
Composite costs more up front but needs almost no upkeep, which is a good call for a cottage you can't maintain every weekend. Wood is warmer and cheaper to build but wants restaining every couple of years, a chore with our sun and freeze-thaw. We'll lay out both options for your spot before you decide.
Can you build a deck on a waterfront or riverfront lot?
Yes, that's a lot of what we do. River soil shifts and a deck on bad footings heaves the first winter, so we set footings below frost line and size them for the ground. We use corrosion-rated hardware against the spray and plan for snow load. Inland crews often get this wrong.
Decks & Outdoor Living in Cape Vincent? Get a quote.
A local, fully insured crew. Honest number before we start.