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fencing along the Murray Boulevard corridor in Beaverton
Murray Hill, Beaverton · 97008 · Corridor Area

Fencing Along Murray Boulevard

The local fence company for the homes and businesses lining the Murray Boulevard corridor in southwest Beaverton — noise-buffer cedar privacy, low-maintenance vinyl, chain-link, and commercial fencing built for life along a busy arterial.

Murray Hill 97008 Homes & Businesses Open 24/7
Proximity Hub · Murray Boulevard

Your Fence Company Along the Murray Boulevard Corridor

Murray Boulevard is one of southwest Beaverton's busiest arterials, carrying steady traffic through the Murray Hill and Murrayhill community on its way past strip retail, office parks, and thousands of homes tucked onto the side streets behind it. When homeowners and business owners ask who installs fences along Murray Boulevard in Beaverton, the answer is Beaverton Fence Pro — the local crew that works the blocks fronting and feeding off Murray Blvd in the 97008 ZIP week after week.

To be clear, we serve the homes and businesses along and just off the corridor, not the roadway itself. Single-family houses and townhomes on the residential streets behind the arterial, multi-family complexes that front it, and the retail centers and office suites lining Murray Boulevard all need fencing built for the Pacific Northwest — and, this close to a major road, built to buffer noise. We bring cedar privacy fencing, low-maintenance vinyl, chain-link, and commercial-grade options to your property, set them to last in our wet climate, and keep the job inside Beaverton's fence code. Call (855) 598-3288 any time — we answer 24/7.

What makes the Murray Boulevard corridor different from a quiet cul-de-sac is the mix of pressures on a fence. The arterial runs from SW Scholls Ferry Road down past Murray Scholls Town Center and on toward SW Allen Boulevard and SW Hall Boulevard, so a single block can hold a townhome row, an apartment frontage, and a strip-center pad all needing different fencing on the same wet, clay-heavy ground. We have built and repaired enough fences across this part of 97008 to know how the corridor behaves season to season — where the ground holds water through February, which exposures take the brunt of a winter windstorm, and how much screening it actually takes to settle a backyard down when traffic never stops. That local read is what we bring to every estimate along Murray Boulevard, whether the property is a side-street house or a storefront facing the road.

Along the Corridor

Privacy & Noise-Buffer Fencing on the Side Streets Off Murray Blvd

The homes near Murray Boulevard range from established ranch and split-level houses to newer townhome rows, and the most common request along the corridor is a backyard that feels calm and private despite the constant traffic on the arterial. A solid, full-height privacy fence does double duty here: it screens sightlines and helps knock down road noise so the yard feels like a yard again.

On the side streets off Murray Blvd, lot lines often sit close to neighbors and the back of the yard can face the arterial directly, so where the fence lands matters as much as what it is made of. We walk the line with you first, mark the setbacks, and figure out whether a straight rear run, a wrapped corner, or a stepped run down a sloped lot will give the most screening for the money. On corridor-facing lots we usually recommend building the back run as tall and solid as code allows and reserving lighter, more open styles for the street side where privacy and sound are less of a concern. Matching the existing grade and keeping panels tight to the ground closes the gap at the bottom where road noise and stray sightlines slip through on a quick, careless install.

Cedar privacy that buffers arterial noise

A tight, board-on-board 6-foot cedar privacy fence is the go-to for homes near the corridor — the denser the panel and the fewer the gaps, the more it dampens the steady hum off Murray Boulevard while screening parking and roadside sightlines.

Vinyl for low-maintenance corridor lots

Solid-panel vinyl suits the busy streets feeding off Murray Blvd for owners who want a clean, gap-free barrier with no staining or sealing season after season — and the same dense face that helps with road noise.

Posts set for the PNW

Every post along the corridor goes in a concrete footing with proper drainage, because the saturated Murray Hill ground is what fails shallow-set fences first — and a leaning fence buffers nothing.

Whether you want full backyard privacy or a tidy side-yard run, cedar privacy fence installation and vinyl fence installation are the two materials we install most for corridor-adjacent homes along Murray Boulevard.

cedar privacy fence buffering road noise on a home near Murray Boulevard Beaverton
What We Build Along the Corridor

Fencing Services Along Murray Boulevard

From noise-buffer backyard cedar to storefront security fencing, here is what we install and repair for properties along and just off Murray Blvd.

Fence Installation Along Murray BoulevardNew cedar, vinyl, and chain-link fences for homes and businesses in the 97008 corridor. Cedar Privacy FencesFull-height cedar screening that buffers road noise and handles Murray Hill's wet winters.

Commercial & Security Fencing

Perimeter fence, gates, and dumpster enclosures for strip retail and offices on the corridor.

Fence Repair

Storm, wind, and wet-ground damage repaired fast all along the Murray Blvd corridor.

97008
Murray Hill ZIP served
24/7
Phone answered
6 ft
Standard privacy height
Free
On-site estimates
commercial security fencing for a strip retail tenant along Murray Boulevard Beaverton
Homeowners & Businesses

Commercial & Storefront Fencing on the Murray Boulevard Corridor

Murray Boulevard is a working commercial spine, and the businesses along it — strip retail centers, pad sites, and office suites between SW Scholls Ferry Road and SW Allen Boulevard — have their own fencing needs. We handle commercial work as readily as residential.

Commercial fencing on the corridor carries demands a backyard run never sees. A gate at a busy strip center gets cycled dozens of times a day for deliveries and trash pickup, so the hardware and posts have to be sized for that wear, not a homeowner's once-a-week use. Property managers and tenants often have to satisfy a lease or a franchise standard for how a dumpster enclosure looks and how high a screen wall has to be, and we build to those written specs rather than guessing. Visibility cuts both ways out here too — a frontage on Murray Blvd needs a barrier that secures the yard or the equipment area without walling off the storefront from the traffic that drives walk-in business. We size and place the fence to do both, and we keep the footings deep and drained so a commercial run on this saturated ground stays plumb through the rainy season.

  • Security and perimeter fencing for retail and office property on the corridor
  • Dumpster and equipment enclosures that meet strip-center tenant requirements
  • Gate installation for access control, loading, and deliveries
  • Chain-link for yard separation, storage, and utility areas

Can we fence a commercial property or storefront along the corridor? Yes — commercial & security fencing is one of our core services, and we coordinate around business hours so the work does not disrupt your customers or your frontage on Murray Blvd.

Fence Repair & Storm-Damage Response Along the Corridor

How fast can you repair a damaged fence along Murray Boulevard? Quickly — because we are a local crew, not a dispatch from across the metro. Two things break fences faster than anything else here: long stretches of saturated ground that loosen shallow posts, and winter windstorms that push on full panels and topple sections that were never set deep enough. Corridor fences take an extra beating, because the same dense, gap-free panels that buffer road noise also catch more wind than an open picket run, so footing depth matters even more. When a section leans after a storm or a gate stops latching, we come out, assess whether a repair or a replacement run makes more sense, and get your boundary — and your noise buffer — sound again. For leaning posts, broken rails, sagging gates, and wind-blown panels, fence repair is a same-area call away.

Repair on the corridor is rarely just cosmetic. A panel blown loose along Murray Boulevard means the yard has lost its sound buffer and its privacy at the same time, and a gate that will not latch on a commercial lot is a security gap until it is fixed. When we come out, we look past the obvious break to the cause — a post that has rocked loose in soft ground will keep taking its neighbors down with it, and patching only the visible panel buys a few months at most. We tell you straight whether resetting a footing, replacing a run, or rebuilding a tired old fence is the honest call, and on the worst windstorm nights we can secure a downed section temporarily so an open yard is not left exposed until the full repair is scheduled.

Cross-Streets & Neighborhoods We Cover Along Murray Blvd

Which cross-streets and neighborhoods along Murray Boulevard do we serve? Effectively the whole corridor through this corner of 97008. Our work centers on the residential and commercial frontage where Murray Blvd meets the big crossings: the homes and centers near SW Scholls Ferry Road, the blocks around SW Allen Boulevard, the stretch toward SW Hall Boulevard, and the side streets near SW Davies Road. From there we reach across the side-street neighborhoods that feed the arterial throughout the Murray Hill and Murrayhill community. With Highway 217 close by and Scholls Ferry running straight to the corridor, getting to any property along Murray Boulevard is fast.

Coverage along the corridor is not one flat zone — the property mix shifts as you move down Murray Blvd. The stretch near SW Scholls Ferry Road and Murray Scholls Town Center leans commercial and multi-family, with retail frontage and apartment perimeters that call for security fencing and enclosures. Move toward SW Allen Boulevard and the back-of-yard fences on the side streets dominate, where noise-buffer cedar and vinyl do the heavy lifting. Closer to SW Hall Boulevard and the blocks off SW Davies Road, it is mostly settled single-family lots with older runs ready for replacement. Knowing which kind of property sits on which part of the corridor means we show up with the right read on what the job needs before we ever pull a tape measure.

Because so much of Murray Hill grew up around this arterial, many lots along the corridor have aging fences that are due for replacement rather than another patch — especially the older runs that no longer block much of the road noise. We can match an existing style so a new run blends with what is already there, or modernize a tired wood fence into clean, dense vinyl or cedar that buffers better. If you are weighing your options, our broader pages for fencing in Murray Hill and the city-wide overview of fencing in Beaverton lay out what works best by area. You can also browse every neighborhood we serve from the Beaverton service areas directory, or look at the sibling spot down the corridor near fencing near Murray Scholls Town Center.

Why a Local Corridor Fence Crew Matters

Anyone can quote a fence. What separates a fence that lasts a decade — and keeps buffering road noise — from one that leans in two winters is whether the installer understands this specific ground and this specific setting. The streets off Murray Boulevard sit on the kind of clay-heavy, water-retaining soil that punishes shortcuts: posts set too shallow, footings without drainage, untreated lumber against wet earth, panels too loose to stop sound. We build for that reality on every job along the corridor, which is why our fences hold their line and their screening through the wettest Beaverton winters. A crew that works these blocks week after week also knows the small things that crews from across the metro miss — that cedar set against wet earth without the right base rots from the bottom up, that a footing without drainage heaves in a freeze, and that a dense panel facing the arterial needs deeper posts than the same panel on a sheltered side yard. None of that shows up in a rushed phone quote, but all of it decides whether your fence is still straight and still quiet five winters from now. When you are ready to move from research to a real estimate, the next step is the transactional page for fence installation along Murray Boulevard, or simply call (855) 598-3288. We will walk your property, talk through code, noise, and materials, and give you a clear, no-pressure estimate.

What to Expect From Your Murray Boulevard Estimate

An estimate along the corridor starts on site, not over the phone, because no two lots off Murray Boulevard behave the same way. We walk the line with you, check the grade and how the ground drains, look at where the property faces the arterial, and listen to what you actually want the fence to do — full backyard privacy, a quieter yard, a secured equipment area, or a clean replacement that matches what is already there. From that we lay out the realistic choices: which material fits the use and the budget, how tall code lets you build on each side, where gates make sense, and how the posts and footings need to be set for this saturated Murray Hill ground. You get straight pricing and a clear plan, with no pressure to decide on the spot.

Timeline depends on the season and the run, and we tell you that up front rather than promising a date we cannot hold. A standard residential privacy run on a side street off the corridor is a short job once materials are staged; a commercial enclosure or a long run with several gates takes longer to build right. The Pacific Northwest winter is the real variable — saturated ground and storm weather can push a footing pour, and we would rather set posts in conditions that let the concrete cure than rush a job that leans by spring. Whatever the property, the estimate spells out scope, materials, and the order of work so there are no surprises once the crew is on Murray Boulevard.

Quick Answers

Murray Boulevard Fencing FAQs

Straight answers — no clicking around.

Do you only work right on Murray Boulevard?
No — we serve the homes and businesses along and just off the corridor, not the roadway itself. That includes single-family homes and townhomes on the side streets behind the arterial, multi-family complexes that front it, and the retail storefronts and offices lining Murray Blvd in the 97008 area.
What fence height best buffers arterial road noise?
Taller and denser helps most. A solid 6-foot fence — the maximum side and rear height Beaverton code generally allows without a permit — with a tight, gap-free face does the best job of knocking down the steady hum off Murray Boulevard. Board-on-board cedar or solid-panel vinyl outperform open picket or spaced-board styles for sound.
Vinyl or cedar for a corridor-adjacent backyard?
Both work well when installed correctly and both buffer noise when built solid. Cedar is naturally rot-resistant and classic-looking; solid-panel vinyl is the lowest-maintenance choice. Near Murray Boulevard the bigger factors are a dense, gap-free face for sound and concrete footings with drainage for the wet ground — those matter more than the material label.
Do you build enclosures and gates for strip-retail tenants?
Yes. Dumpster and equipment enclosures, perimeter security fencing, and access gates for loading and deliveries are routine commercial work for us along the corridor. We build to tenant and property-management specs and schedule around business hours so your storefront on Murray Blvd stays open.

Fencing Along Murray Boulevard

Local crew, noise-buffer builds, code-aware work, free on-site estimates along the corridor. We answer 24/7.

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