
Ready to hire a fence installer in Highland? We build long-run cedar privacy and ornamental fencing for the neighborhood's large lots, walkout-basement slopes, and Highland Hills HOA homes — and we answer the phone 24/7.
Beaverton Fence Pro is the crew Highland homeowners call when they are ready to hire. We are a service-area company that comes to your property — no storefront, no published address, just a crew that arrives where the work is. Highland sits in ZIP 97008 about twenty minutes from downtown Portland, reached via SW Hall Boulevard off Highway 217. It is an established neighborhood of 1970s-through-90s homes — ramblers, two-story houses with basements, walkout-basement designs, and split-entries — on large lots with mature landscaping.
This page is where you start when you want to move forward. Two things shape fencing here: the size of the lots, which means long fence runs, and the grade, since walkout-basement homes sit on slopes that need a stepped or raked fence. Many homes also belong to the Highland Hills HOA, with its own architectural rules and community pool and clubhouse. Tell us your cross streets and what you want fenced, and we will set up a free on-site estimate. Call (855) 598-3288 any time.
Large lots, walkout-basement slopes, mature landscaping, and Highland Hills HOA rules all shape how a fence gets built here.
Big Highland lots mean longer fence lines. We plan post spacing, gates, and material for a run that stays straight and true over distance.
Walkout and split-entry homes sit on grade changes. We step or rake the fence to follow the slope cleanly, with no gaps at the bottom.
HOA homes follow architectural rules on height, material, and color. We provide the specs your board needs and build to the approved style.
The styles that suit large lots, slopes, and HOA homes.
The choice for big backyards. A solid cedar privacy fence screens a long run with natural warmth, and rot-resistant cedar lasts 20-plus years in the climate.
For front yards, slopes, and accent runs, aluminum & ornamental fence installation gives a refined, open boundary that steps neatly down a grade.
Classic wood fence installation suits the established ramblers and two-story homes here, built with cedar to handle the wet ground.
For low-maintenance HOA homes, vinyl fence installation holds a crisp line for decades with no staining or sealing required.
In Highland, side and rear fences run up to 6 feet without a building permit, while front and street-facing fences stay near 3.5 feet — and Highland Hills HOA rules may add their own. On the walkout-basement grades here, we step or rake the fence to follow the slope with no gaps. Posts go in concrete for the wet ground, and we use rot-resistant cedar within six inches of the soil so even a long run holds for decades.
A simple path from your first call to a fence that lasts.
Most jobs here are a homeowner privacy-fencing a big backyard, replacing an aging fence, or running a clean line down a walkout-basement slope. We handle the slope work that trips up less-experienced crews — stepping or raking the fence so it follows the grade without leaving gaps a pet could slip through. For HOA homes, we hand Highland Hills the specs it needs and build to the approved style. We keep the choice between fence repair and fence replacement honest, and a matching gate installation finishes the run.
Beyond single-family homes, we handle nearby HOA common areas and small commercial properties around Highland — pool and clubhouse enclosures, perimeter runs, and screening for the managed sections. These jobs use the same slope expertise and long-run planning as the residential work, with scheduling that fits an association or property manager. The crew that fences a large Highland backyard handles the common-area work the same careful way.
Every fence type we install across this large-lot Beaverton neighborhood.
There is a pattern to how Highland gets fenced. Big backyards want full six-foot cedar privacy over a long run, walkout-basement and split-entry homes need a fence that steps cleanly down the grade, and front yards lean toward open ornamental or low fencing that keeps the established curb appeal. Mature landscaping is everywhere, so we plan the line to work around it. Across all of it, the lot size means more material and careful spacing, and the HOA and city code set the height and style boundaries we build within.
The Pacific Northwest climate sets the standard, and a long run only multiplies the importance of doing it right. Wet winters keep the soil saturated, so footings have to be deep and well-drained, and the wood has to be naturally decay-resistant cedar to last 20 years or more. On a slope, post depth and proper stepping are what keep a fence from sagging or gapping over time. When you are ready to hire, this is the page to act on — browse the full menu of our fencing services, see how the area fits the map on the Highland overview, or step back to fencing in Beaverton for the citywide picture. Then call and we will schedule your estimate.
Straight answers — no clicking around.
Explore the Highland overview or the full Beaverton fencing hub.
Highland Overview Fencing in BeavertonLong-run and slope expertise, HOA-ready, free on-site estimates. We answer 24/7.
(855) 598-3288