
New fences, repairs, and commercial fencing for the homes and businesses near Cedar Hills Crossing — cedar privacy, vinyl, chain-link, and ornamental, built to last in Beaverton's wet climate. Call for a free on-site estimate.
Looking for who installs fences near Cedar Hills Crossing? Beaverton Fence Pro is the local crew that builds and repairs fences for the homes and businesses around the Cedar Hills Crossing district at 3205 SW Cedar Hills Boulevard. We install cedar privacy fence, vinyl, chain-link, aluminum, and commercial security fencing across the 97005 streets that fan out from the center, and we answer the phone 24/7. To start a project, call (855) 598-3288 for a free on-site estimate.
Cedar Hills Crossing, the anchored retail mall that opened in 1969 on the former Bernard's Airport site, sits at the heart of one of Beaverton's most established neighborhoods. We serve the properties around it — the mid-century ranch homes, split-levels, and longtime residential streets, plus the multi-tenant retail strips, restaurant pads, and small medical and office suites near the mall — not the shopping center itself. With Nike World Headquarters and the broader employment corridor pulling tens of thousands of daytime workers into this part of Beaverton, demand for solid, code-compliant fencing here stays high year-round, and a local installer who already knows the ground gets it done right the first time.
Our work centers on the residential and commercial blocks ringing the mall: the homes off SW Cedar Hills Boulevard and SW Walker Road, the streets near SW Hall Boulevard, and the pockets along SW Butner Road and SW Jenkins Road. These are established Cedar Hills lots — many built decades ago, with mature trees, settled landscaping, and property lines that have shifted over the years. That history shapes every job. We confirm the boundary first, check the vision-clearance triangle Beaverton enforces on corner lots near busy intersections, and coordinate with neighbors when a fence sits on a shared line.
The proximity to Cedar Hills Crossing means privacy and noise screening matter more here than on a quiet cul-de-sac. Retail parking, delivery traffic, and the steady flow off Cedar Hills Boulevard all sit close to backyards on these streets, so a full-height fence earns its keep. We build the nearby properties — single-family homes, condos, apartments, storefronts, and offices — not the mall property. With Highway 26 and Highway 217 ramps minutes away, our trucks stay close and our response times stay short whether you need a full new fence line or a quick repair before the next windstorm.
Matched to the older lots and busy-corridor backyards around Cedar Hills Crossing — chosen for the Pacific Northwest before they're chosen for looks.
A 6-foot good-neighbor cedar fence is the go-to for homes near the mall — full screening from retail parking and roads, with rot-resistant heartwood set off the wet soil line. See cedar privacy fence installation.
Classic dog-ear and flat-top wood fences suit the mid-century ranch homes that fill these blocks. Browse wood fence installation options.
Low-maintenance vinyl fits updated suburban lots off Cedar Hills Boulevard — no staining or sealing, season after wet season. Explore vinyl fence installation.
Galvanized chain-link for utility yards and side runs, plus powder-coated aluminum for a tidy decorative boundary. See chain-link fence installation.
The storefronts, restaurant pads, and small office and medical suites around Cedar Hills Crossing have their own fencing needs — and we handle commercial work as readily as residential. We build perimeter and security fence, dumpster and equipment enclosures that satisfy both landlord and hauler, and swing or rolling gates wide enough to clear a loading area. Heavier-gauge posts go in deeper concrete footings on the spans that take constant gate use, and we phase the job so a storefront stays open while the crew is on site. Ask about commercial & security fencing and gate installation.
From first call to finished fence near Cedar Hills Crossing — straightforward, with no pressure.
How deep should fence posts go in Beaverton's wet soil? Deeper than most homeowners expect, and that depth is what separates a fence that lasts a decade from one that leans in two winters. Cedar Hills sits on clay-heavy, water-retaining ground, so every post near Cedar Hills Crossing goes into a concrete footing with drainage at the base — typically a third of the post's length below grade for a 6-foot fence. Saturated soil loosens shallow-set posts first, and that's the failure point we engineer out on day one. Untreated lumber that touches wet earth wicks moisture upward and rots from the bottom, so cedar gets rot-resistant heartwood at the base and a gap above the soil line.
The mature trees and settled landscaping common on these older lots add their own wrinkles. Roots can force a post layout to flex around a trunk, and we plan the run so it clears established plantings without cutting into a tree's root zone. Shared property lines that have drifted over the decades get confirmed before we dig, and on the gentle slopes that run through parts of Cedar Hills we step or rack panels to follow the grade cleanly. None of this shows in a glossy brochure, but it's exactly the judgment a national crew passing through for a season doesn't carry — and it's why our fences hold their line through the wettest Beaverton winters.
Do you handle fence repair and replacement near Cedar Hills? Yes — and because we're a local crew, not a dispatch from across the metro, we get to leaning posts, broken rails, sagging gates, and wind-blown panels fast. Two failures account for most damage here: long stretches of saturated ground that loosen shallow footings, and winter windstorms that push on panels and topple sections set too shallow. When a whole section tips after heavy rain, the post footing usually gave way rather than the panel breaking, so we reset that post in a deeper footing and the line holds. When wind splits rails but the posts stay plumb, we swap panel material and keep the original posts, which keeps the fence repair quick and the cost down.
Because Cedar Hills is one of Beaverton's older neighborhoods, many lots here have aging fences that are past patching and due for replacement. We can match an existing style so a new run blends with what's already there, or modernize a tired wood fence into clean vinyl or cedar. If you're weighing your options, the broader overview of fencing in Cedar Hills and the city-wide page for fencing in Beaverton lay out what works best by area, and you can see every service we offer on the fencing services page. When you're ready to talk specifics, the contextual hub for Cedar Hills Crossing covers the surrounding streets in more detail.
Quickly. Call (855) 598-3288 and we'll schedule an on-site visit at your convenience, often within a day or two for properties near Cedar Hills Crossing. Staying close to this pocket of 97005 means we already know which blocks have tight side-yard access, where overhead utility lines limit a tall section, and how the streets off Cedar Hills Boulevard back up around shopping hours — so we schedule digging and deliveries to avoid the crunch. With Highway 26 and Highway 217 both minutes out, a crew already working one Cedar Hills job can often swing by a neighbor's property the same day rather than booking you a week out. You get a clear, written estimate with no obligation and no pressure.
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Cedar Hills Crossing Fencing in BeavertonLocal crew, code- and HOA-aware builds, free on-site estimates. We answer 24/7.
(855) 598-3288