Landscape & Hardscape · New London, NH
Landscape & Hardscape in New London, New Hampshire.
New London is hills between Lake Sunapee and Pleasant Lake, with long mountain views, and that shapes every decision here. We build landscape & hardscape on stony glacial till and ledge on the hillsides, detailed for the shingled summer estates they sit beside — hand-set, drainage-first, and made to look like they were always part of the property.
Stone and softscape, together
Walls, patios, walkways, steps, and planting beds succeed when one crew builds them in the right sequence. We coordinate the hardscape and the softscape so the stone frames the plantings and the plantings soften the stone — tuned to the shingled summer estates, lake houses, and colonial village homes of New London Village, Little Lake Sunapee, and Pleasant Lake and the wider Upper Valley.
It is the difference between a resolved landscape and two trades fighting over the same ground.
For New London designers and architects
A large share of our New Hampshire work is executing drawings for landscape architects — reading elevations, holding the specified batter and joint, and flagging a conflict before it becomes a change order. Much of it in ongoing collaboration with Jonathan Keep Landscape Design.
The crew New London designers trust
The Sunapee region’s summer estates sit on hillside lots with lake and mountain views — terracing and shoreland rules shape nearly every project here.
On full-site projects we are frequently the execution crew for landscape architects and designers — much of our Upper Valley work in ongoing collaboration with Jonathan Keep Landscape Design. We read plans fluently, flag conflicts before they become change orders, and build exactly what was drawn.
Choosing material that suits New London
We buy from New England quarries and yards we have used for years, and we hand-pick rather than take a pallet sight unseen. For New London, that usually means matching color and texture to the shingled summer estates already on the street.
How a New London project runs
Most New London homeowners are more worried about the disruption than the stone, and they are right to be. We stage material where it will not kill the lawn, protect the drive and the root zones, and sweep the site at the end of every working day.
Questions
Landscape & Hardscape in New London, answered.
The Sunapee region’s summer estates sit on hillside lots with lake and mountain views — terracing and shoreland rules shape nearly every project here. We handle the local checks that go with that as part of the project rather than leaving them to you.
Hills between Lake Sunapee and Pleasant Lake, with long mountain views on stony glacial till and ledge on the hillsides. That governs how we found and drain everything we build here — a proper base and drainage go in before a single stone is set, which is what keeps New London stonework flat, plumb, and intact through freeze-thaw.
Usually, yes. We hand-select from regional yards to match color, cleft, and scale against what is already on the property — which matters in New London, where the shingled summer estates tend to be added to over time rather than replaced.
Most residential work runs one to three weeks on site, depending on size, access, and how much excavation stony glacial till and ledge on the hillsides demands. You get a real schedule before we start, and we hold it — including the clean-up at the end of each day.
Request a Consultation
Planning landscape & hardscape in New London?
Tell us about your property. We’ll walk the site, talk materials, and give you a clear plan.
Response within one business day.
