Max, the pug admires the new look from his perch inside the window.

Max, the pug admires the new look from his perch inside the window.

Elree

From tripping hazard to pretty pathway

Elree is an avid gardener who had recently moved to Greenbank from Salt Lake City, UT. Bit by bit, she has been digging up parts of the yard and replanting areas. As much as she loves to dig, even she realized she would need help digging up a tired, poorly laid brick path that led from her driveway to her back door. Her goal—eliminate the original tripping hazard path and uneven surface. But what would replace it? While at a friend’s house she had admired her walkway and was told Robert had laid stone for it. She pointed to it and said, "that's exactly what I want!”

Elree contacted Robert and after some consultation and examining what would look nice for the space, Robert designed a slightly curved, flagstone walkway. The path would give Elree areas of interest to create with her plants and provide huge curb appeal from the driveway to her door and the colors of the stone would look great all year round.

“Robert and crew removed one tired and weedy brick path, pulled up several ugly overgrown shrubs, crafted a curvy bluestone sidewalk, and made room for new flower beds. It's as if my house got a face lift.”
—Elree