
The local fence company for the homes and businesses in the Murrayhill subdivisions around Murray Scholls Town Center — vinyl, cedar privacy, HOA-friendly styles, and commercial fencing built for the Murray Hill area.
Murray Scholls Town Center sits at the junction of SW Murray Boulevard and SW Scholls Ferry Road, anchoring a mixed-use corner near 14845 SW Murray Scholls Drive in the 97007 ZIP. The Murrayhill subdivisions that fan out around it — a master-planned community spread across roughly 379 acres northwest of the intersection — make up some of the most consistent residential streets in this part of Murray Hill. When homeowners and business owners here ask who installs fences near Murray Scholls Town Center, the answer is Beaverton Fence Pro, the local crew that works the subdivisions off Murray Boulevard and Scholls Ferry Road every week.
To be clear, we serve the homes and businesses near the town center, not the shopping center itself. Single-family houses and townhomes in the Murrayhill community, multi-family complexes close to the center, and the retail storefronts and offices ringing the property all need fencing built for the Pacific Northwest. We bring low-maintenance vinyl, cedar privacy fencing, 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.
This corner of 97007 is busy. The town center pulls daily traffic to New Seasons, the Walgreens, and the county library branch, and the residential streets behind it carry the overflow off SW Scholls Ferry Road and SW Murray Boulevard. That setting shapes what a fence has to do here: screen a backyard from a thoroughfare, hold up to constant car and foot traffic at a storefront, and still look like it belongs on a subdivision street that an architectural review committee keeps uniform. We have built and repaired fences on these blocks long enough to know how each Murrayhill pocket sits relative to the roads, where drainage runs, and what the neighborhood associations expect — and we bring that to every quote near Murray Scholls Drive.
The Murrayhill community holds well over a thousand residences — single-family homes on tidy suburban lots and rows of townhomes, many governed by neighborhood associations. The most common request here is a backyard that feels private despite close-set lots and the steady traffic on Murray Boulevard and Scholls Ferry Road. That is where the right fence earns its keep.
Vinyl fencing is a favorite across the Murrayhill subdivisions for owners who want a clean, uniform look with no staining or sealing season after season — a strong fit for HOA-minded streets.
A 6-foot cedar privacy fence is the go-to for homes near the town center — full-height screening that blocks sightlines from neighbors and nearby roads while standing up to wet winters.
We build to subdivision specs — approved heights, materials, and good-neighbor finishes — and handle the shorter, shared runs common to Murrayhill townhomes.
The Murrayhill community is large — roughly 379 acres holding close to 1,457 residences — and homes built in the same era tend to share lot lines, slopes, and the same aging wood fences put in decades ago. When a back run starts to lean, neighbors often replace together so the new fence reads as one continuous line rather than a patchwork. We are set up for that: we can phase a shared run, match post spacing and panel height to what an adjoining owner already has, and keep the color and cap style consistent so nothing trips the architectural review committee. On a townhome row, where the side fence is the shared boundary, getting that uniformity right is the difference between an approval and a redo.
Whether you want full backyard privacy or a tidy, low-upkeep boundary, vinyl fence installation and cedar privacy fence installation are the two materials we install most around the Murray Scholls Town Center area.

From backyard vinyl and cedar to storefront security fencing, here is what we install and repair for properties in the Murray Hill area.
Perimeter fence, gates, and dumpster enclosures for retail and office tenants near the town center.

Murray Scholls Town Center draws steady retail activity, and the businesses around it — storefronts, pad sites, and office suites along Murray Boulevard and Scholls Ferry Road — have their own fencing needs. We handle commercial work as readily as residential.
Commercial work near the town center comes with its own constraints. A trash enclosure has to meet the property manager's spec and leave room for the hauler to swing a gate; a delivery gate has to clear a truck without blocking the drive aisle off SW Murray Scholls Drive; a perimeter line behind a pad site has to keep foot traffic out of the back-of-house without looking like a fortress from the parking lot. We size and set each of those for the actual site rather than dropping in a standard panel run, and we pour footings deep enough to take the daily abuse a busy retail corner hands a gate. Most of this work we stage early morning or after close so your storefront keeps trading while we build.
Do you build gates and enclosures for retail tenants near the town center? Yes — commercial & security fencing is one of our core services, and we coordinate around business hours so the work does not disrupt your customers.
How fast can you repair a damaged fence near Murray Boulevard? Quickly — because we are a local crew, not a dispatch from across the metro. The Pacific Northwest delivers the two things that break fences most: long stretches of saturated ground that loosen shallow posts, and winter windstorms that push on panels and topple sections that were never set deep enough. Homes near Murray Scholls Town Center see both. 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 sound again. For leaning posts, broken rails, sagging gates, and wind-blown panels, fence repair near the town center is a same-area call away.
Repair is also where a lot of Murrayhill owners learn what the original installer cut corners on. We routinely pull a leaning post and find it was set barely two feet down with no gravel base and no slope on the concrete, so water pooled around the base and rotted the wood from the ground up. When that is the story, patching the one post just buys a season — the next post down the line is usually next. We will tell you that plainly rather than sell you a quick fix that fails again, and when a full run does make sense we can usually match the existing height and style closely enough that it does not jump out from the street. If your fence backs a busy stretch of Scholls Ferry Road or Murray Boulevard, we also check the gate hardware and bracing, because those are the joints that loosen first under constant traffic vibration and gusts off the open road.
Which Murray Hill neighborhoods near Murray Scholls Town Center do we serve? The short answer is all of them in this corner of 97007. Our work centers on the residential and commercial streets near the center: the Murrayhill subdivisions off SW Murray Boulevard and SW Scholls Ferry Road, the blocks along SW Murray Scholls Drive, and the streets near SW Teal Boulevard and SW Barrows Road. From there we reach across the rest of Murray Hill, including the corridor that runs north along Murray Boulevard. With Highway 217 and Scholls Ferry Road both close at hand, getting to any property in this area is fast.
The streets closest to the center get the most of our time. The blocks off SW Barrows Road and SW Teal Boulevard run into the heart of the Murrayhill subdivisions, and the homes along SW Murray Scholls Drive sit right against the center's traffic, so privacy and a solid road-side screen are the common asks there. Push a little further and the same crew covers the rest of Murray Hill north along the Murray Boulevard corridor and out toward the 97008 edge. We keep a working map of which subdivisions sit on the steeper grades and which back directly onto an arterial, because that changes how we set posts and which side we run the good-neighbor finish.
Because Murrayhill is a master-planned community with many homes of a similar vintage, lots here often have aging fences due for replacement rather than another patch. We can match an existing style so a new run blends with what is already there, or modernize a tired wood fence into clean vinyl or cedar. 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 landmark along fencing along Murray Boulevard just up the corridor, and the nearby fencing near Progress Ridge center.
Most homes in the Murrayhill subdivisions sit under a neighborhood association, and that usually means an architectural review committee signs off on a fence before it goes in. The rules vary by pocket, but the recurring themes are uniform height, an approved material and color, and a good-neighbor finish so the framed side faces your own yard rather than the street or your neighbor. A 6-foot board-on-board cedar or a clean white or tan vinyl in a consistent profile tends to clear review without friction, while anything that breaks the established street line — an odd height, a loud color, exposed posts on the public side — is what gets a submission bounced back. We build to the spec your CC&Rs set, not to a generic catalog default.
Before we order a single panel, we confirm what your association allows and, where the committee wants it, put together the height, material, and layout details they ask for. If you are not sure which document governs your lot or what the current rule is, that is a normal first question and we are used to walking owners through it. The goal is one clean approval and a fence that blends with the run already on your block — not a callback after a neighbor flags it. That groundwork is exactly why owners around Murray Scholls Town Center bring in a crew that already works these subdivisions every week.
Anyone can quote a fence. What separates a fence that lasts a decade from one that leans in two winters is whether the installer understands this specific ground. Murray Hill sits on the kind of clay-heavy, water-retaining soil that punishes shortcuts — posts set too shallow, footings without drainage, untreated lumber against wet earth. We build for that reality on every job near Murray Scholls Town Center, which is why our fences hold their line through the wettest Beaverton winters. There is also the practical side of working in a managed community: a local crew already knows the Murrayhill review process, builds to the heights and materials the associations allow, and does not waste your week guessing at rules a committee will reject. We pull the right Beaverton permits where they apply, set every post in a proper concrete footing with drainage at the base, and keep treated lumber off bare wet ground — the small choices that decide whether a fence stands straight in ten years or sags in two.
When you are ready to move from research to a real estimate, the next step is the transactional page for fence installation near Murray Scholls Town Center, or simply call (855) 598-3288. We will walk your property, talk through code and materials, and give you a clear, no-pressure estimate.
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Fence Installation Near Murray Scholls Town Center Beaverton FencingLocal crew, code- and HOA-aware builds for the Murrayhill subdivisions, free on-site estimates. We answer 24/7.
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