Since 2009, Team Dave Logan has helped millions of Colorado homeowners connect with background-checked, local contractors—no personal data required.
Find a Landscaping ContractorAlthough we hold our companies to a high standard, you are encouraged to do your own due diligence before hiring one of our pros to work with you, as everyone’s needs and requirements are different.
Services | Landscaping
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Our Landscaping Contractor Pros offer the following services:

Landscaping companies associated with Team Dave Logan in the Greater Denver Area may offer services like hardscaping, irrigation upgrades, artificial turf installation, seasonal cleanup, drainage correction, xeriscaping, outdoor lighting, and landscape maintenance.A good match depends on the job. Patio work, sprinkler repairs, turf installation, and xeriscaping all call for different skills. In Denver, water use, clay-heavy soil, slope, sun exposure, mulch, and drainage can change the plan fast.
Not every landscaping company handles the same kind of work. Some focus on patios and hardscaping, while others specialize in irrigation, turf, drainage, or maintenance. The services below can help you narrow your search.
Hardscaping projects give a yard structure, especially when the plan includes patios, stone pathways, retaining walls, fire features, or other hardscape features that need to hold up through Denver’s winter weather. Here are a few hardscaping services homeowners may compare:
→ Patios. Solid base preparation, clever drainage, usable area, and a design that accommodates people's movement across the yard are all necessary for a patio.
→ Retaining walls. In Denver, retaining walls over 12 inches may need zoning attention. Taller walls can bring engineering or building review into the conversation.
→ Outdoor kitchens. Seating, smoke, shade, utilities, storage, and winter exposure all matter before the first material gets ordered.
→ Pavers. The part you do not see matters most. Base prep and edge support prevent shifting, sinking, and uneven spots.
→ Masonry. Stone, brick, and block can support borders, walls, outdoor rooms, and patio details that feel more built-in.
→ Concrete borders. Borders divide mulch, turf, rock, walkways, and planting areas, making maintenance easier afterward.
Irrigation and maintenance are not the most visually appealing aspects of a yard, but they have a significant impact on how well the landscape lasts. Denver’s dry spells can expose weak sprinkler coverage, poor soil prep, and thin mulch pretty quickly.
Common services include:
→ Irrigation systems. For larger projects, irrigation system installation or sprinkler system installation may need water budgeting, proper zoning, and a real plan, especially when a Denver sprinkler layout has to work around slopes, planting beds, or poor drainage.
→ Sprinkler repair. Weak pressure, broken heads, and uneven zones can waste water while leaving plants stressed.
→ Drainage. Standing water, erosion, soft ground, or water near the foundation should not be brushed off as “just a wet spot.”
→ Lawn maintenance. Grass type, sun exposure, irrigation rules, soil condition, and mowing schedule all influence how much care the lawn needs.
→ Seasonal cleanup. Spring and fall cleanups can help eliminate waste, rejuvenate beds, and detect early indicators of irrigation or drainage issues.
→ Mulching. Wood mulch and rock mulch behave differently in dry Denver yards. The best option is determined by the bed, plants, heat, and long-term maintenance requirements.

Choosing a Denver landscaping company is more than just who offers the lowest price. Before the first shovel is pushed into the ground, homeowners consider the type of work the company does, how well the plan is explained, and what is included. Before hiring, compare things like:
→ Design, installation, and maintenance experience.
→ Previous experience with patios, retaining walls, turf, irrigation, lighting, and xeriscaping.
→ Understanding Denver's watering constraints and drought-friendly irrigation methods.
→ Drainage and grading plans, particularly for patios and foundations.
→ Soil prep for clay-heavy Front Range yards.
→ Plant choices that can handle Colorado sun, snow, wind, and dry stretches.
→ Artificial turf experience, including heat, drainage, pets, and cleaning.
→ Cleanup after mulch, soil, sod, rock, or paver work.
→ Timeline, crew access, material delivery, and weather delays.
→ Warranty coverage for plants, irrigation, turf, pavers, or hardscape work.
→ Screening, reviews, or listing through a trusted contractor network like Team Dave Logan.
Photos can get your attention. Questions help you spot the difference between a contractor who has a plan and one who is just pricing the visible parts. Ask questions like:
→ Can you help with irrigation and landscape planning documents if the project requires review?
→ Do you understand Denver-area water budgeting and drought-conscious irrigation?
→ Have you worked with multi-sheet irrigation or landscape plan submissions for larger projects?
→ How does your irrigation design protect plants during dry conditions?
→ How will drainage be handled around patios, turf, and planting beds?
→ Do retaining walls, masonry features, or grading changes need permit review?
→ Which plants make sense for this yard’s sun, slope, soil, and water needs?
→ What cleanup is included after the work is finished?
→ What could change the final price after the estimate?
Asking these questions helps you avoid hiring the wrong landscaping company. You could end up with drainage problems, plants that struggle, irrigation that wastes water, or project costs that change after work begins. The right questions help you compare companies based on how well they understand your property.
Team Dave Logan is not a landscaping crew, and we are not the company showing up with pavers, turf rolls, sprinkler parts, or mulch. We help homeowners compare screened Denver landscaping contractors and nearby pros across the Denver metro area, based on the landscaping services their project needs.
That matters when the job is more than “make the yard look better.” A patio, drainage fix, irrigation upgrade, xeriscape plan, or turf installation can each require a different kind of contractor. Team Dave Logan gives homeowners a cleaner place to start before making calls.
✓ Secretary of State verification to confirm the company is properly registered and in good standing
✓ Criminal database searches at the national, state, and county level
✓ Business and personal credit reviews
✓ Civil lawsuit searches
✓ Due diligence reviews of the company’s business background
✓ License verification when required for the trade
✓ Liability insurance verification
✓ Malpractice or errors-and-omissions insurance verification when applicable
✓ Minimum one-year business history requirement
Team Dave Logan also states that member companies continue through annual screening reviews after joining the network. This gives you more information to consider beyond project photos, advertisements, or online ratings alone.

Once a contractor looks like a possible fit, the next step is a real conversation. A good landscaping contractor should ask questions about drainage, irrigation, and how you plan to use the space. These details will influence recommendations, material choices, and overall costs. The initial conversation is also an opportunity to determine whether the contractor has experience with projects similar to yours and whether their approach aligns with your expectations.
Explain what you wish to modify and how the space is used. A dog-friendly grass area, low-water front yard, patio, and outdoor kitchen all require a unique concept.
Most landscaping projects require an in-person inspection of slope, drainage, sun exposure, soil, irrigation, access, and existing features. Photos are helpful, but they do not tell the entire yard story.
Look beyond the final number. Scope, materials, labor, cleanup, warranty details, and exclusions can all vary greatly between bids.
For larger projects, this may include pavers, turf, plants, mulch, lighting, irrigation layouts, or hardscape materials. Ask why each choice fits your yard.
Once the scope is established, the contractor can describe the timing, access requirements, material delivery, water shutoff details, cleanup, and homeowner preparation.
The wrong landscaping hire can leave you with puddles near the patio, vague change orders, thin materials, or a project that stalls right when your yard is torn up. Team Dave Logan gives Denver-area homeowners a place to compare screened local landscaping contractors before anyone starts digging.
For Denver front yards, good xeriscape plant choices include Apache Sunset, Autumn Sapphire Sage, Kannah Creek Buckwheat, Little Trudy Catmint, Chocolate Flower, penstemon, salvia, blue grama, buffalograss, and other native or adapted plants. Because irrigation accounts for almost 50% of single-family home water use in Denver, the best designs incorporate sun, slope, soil, mulch, and sufficient plant coverage to make the yard feel full rather than like a rock patch.
For dry Denver yards, wood chip or bark mulch can work well around trees, shrubs, and perennials, while small gravel mulch can make more sense for xeriscaping and water infiltration. CSU notes that mulch can cut irrigation needs in perennial and shrub beds by up to 50%, and about 4 inches of mulch helps with weed control. Around trees, keep mulch at least 6 inches away from the trunk.
Low-maintenance Colorado backyards operate best when they include hardscape, limited turf, mulch, low-water plants, and smart irrigation. In Denver, where rainfall ranges from 8 to 15 inches per year, clever designs may include patios, native planting beds, drip irrigation, buffalograss, blue grama, fescue, creeping sedum, black-eyed Susans, and serviceberries.
Basic planting, cleanup, and mulching may not require a permit, but larger Denver landscaping jobs may. Denver Water mandates an Irrigation and Landscape Plan Review for taps that service 1 acre or more of irrigated or landscaped property, or a green roof, which costs $460. Retaining walls exceeding 12 inches may also require zoning attention, so homeowners who compare contractors through Team Dave Logan should inquire about permits before construction begins.
With a reach that extends from Longmont to Colorado Springs, our ability to connect homeowners with renovation and repair professionals is unrivaled.