
The local fence company for the newer subdivisions and businesses around Progress Ridge TownSquare — vinyl, cedar privacy, and commercial fencing built for South Beaverton's master-planned neighborhoods.
Progress Ridge TownSquare at SW Barrows Road and SW Horizon Boulevard is the lifestyle anchor of South Beaverton — a walkable center built around New Seasons Market and a dine-in AMC theater, ringed by some of the newest master-planned subdivisions in the 97007 ZIP. When homeowners and business owners in this part of South Beaverton ask who installs fences near Progress Ridge, the answer is Beaverton Fence Pro — the local crew that works the streets off Barrows Road and Horizon Boulevard every week.
To be clear, we serve the homes and businesses near the center, not the shopping center itself. Newer single-family homes in the surrounding subdivisions, townhomes and apartments close to the square, and the retail storefronts and pad tenants 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.
What makes this corner of South Beaverton different from older parts of the city is how recently it was built. Most of the streets feeding off SW Barrows Road and SW Horizon Boulevard went in within the last couple of decades, which means tight lot lines, shared property pins that are still easy to locate, and homeowner associations that take an active role in what goes up on a property. That shapes the fencing work here in a specific way: owners are rarely tearing out a failing 1970s fence, and far more often they are putting up a first boundary, replacing a builder-grade panel that never matched the home, or extending a run to close off a side yard. We plan every install around those realities — the property line, the CC&Rs, and the wet South Beaverton ground — before a single post hole is dug.
The homes near Progress Ridge TownSquare are some of the newest in Beaverton — master-planned subdivisions with tidy lots, modern elevations, and active homeowner associations. Owners here tend to want a clean, low-upkeep boundary that complements a newer build and satisfies the HOA, which is exactly where vinyl and well-built cedar shine.
Vinyl fencing is the most-requested material in the Progress Ridge subdivisions — a crisp, uniform look that never needs staining or sealing and reads as new for years on a recently built home.
A 6-foot cedar privacy fence still wins for backyard screening near Horizon Boulevard — full-height privacy with a warm, natural look that stands up to wet winters.
We build to the height, color, and style your CC&Rs allow, and every post near Progress Ridge goes in a concrete footing with proper drainage so the saturated South Beaverton ground does not loosen it.
Lot size is the other thing that drives the conversation in these subdivisions. Many of the homes near Progress Ridge sit on compact, efficient lots where the fence line runs close to the house and to the neighbor's, so getting the layout right matters more than on a sprawling acre. We stake the line, confirm the corners, and talk through whether a 6-foot privacy run, a 4-foot semi-open style, or a mix of both fits how you actually use the yard. On a smaller lot a solid privacy panel can box in a backyard, so for some owners a lattice-topped section or a slightly shorter run near a patio keeps the space feeling open while still defining the boundary.
Whether you want a low-maintenance front run or full backyard privacy, vinyl fence installation and cedar privacy fence installation are the two materials we install most around the Progress Ridge area.

From low-maintenance vinyl to storefront security fencing, here is what we install and repair for properties around Progress Ridge TownSquare.
Perimeter fence, gates, and enclosures for retail and pad tenants near the center.

Progress Ridge TownSquare draws steady retail and dining activity, and the businesses around it — storefronts, pad sites, and small offices along SW Barrows Road and SW Horizon Boulevard — have their own fencing needs. We handle commercial work as readily as residential.
The mixed-use blocks around SW Horizon Boulevard put a few wrinkles into commercial fencing that a straight residential crew does not always plan for. Foot traffic from New Seasons Market and the dine-in theater runs late into the evening, deliveries arrive on their own schedule, and an enclosure or perimeter run often has to sit close to a shared drive aisle or a public sidewalk. We build with that in mind — gates sized for the trucks that actually serve the property, hinges and latches rated for daily commercial use, and posts set in concrete so a panel does not work loose under constant traffic. Where a landlord or property manager has their own appearance standards for tenant fencing, we match the material and finish so the run looks intentional rather than tacked on.
Do you build enclosures and gates for retail tenants at the 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 SW Barrows Road? Quickly — because we are a local South Beaverton 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. The newer subdivisions near Progress Ridge see both, and even a recently built fence can sag if the original installer cut corners. 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, fast fence repair in South Beaverton is a same-area call away.
There is a pattern to how fences fail around here, and it helps to know it before you decide between a patch and a rebuild. The first thing to go is almost always the post, not the panel — a post set too shallow or poured without gravel at the base rocks loose as the ground swells and drains through the year, and once one post moves, the panels on either side start pulling at their fasteners. We check the posts before anything else. If the line is sound and only a rail or a few pickets took the hit, a targeted repair gets you years more out of the fence. If two or three posts are wobbling and the wood is checked and gray, replacing a full run usually costs less over time than chasing the same failures every winter. After a windstorm we will also reset a gate that has dropped out of square, because a gate that drags is the part you notice every single day.
Which South Beaverton neighborhoods near Progress Ridge 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 master-planned subdivisions off SW Barrows Road and SW Horizon Boulevard, the blocks along SW Scholls Ferry Road, and the newer developments running toward SW 175th Avenue. From there we reach across the rest of fencing in South Beaverton and up into Murray Hill, including the retail corner near fencing near Murray Scholls Town Center just a few minutes away. With Scholls Ferry Road and Highway 217 both close at hand, getting to any property in this area is fast.
Because the subdivisions around Progress Ridge are newer, most lots here are looking for a first fence or an HOA-approved upgrade rather than a tired wood fence swap. We can match an existing neighbor's style so your run blends in, install a uniform vinyl line across a fresh backyard, or build cedar privacy where you want a warmer look. If you are weighing your options, the city-wide overview of fencing in Beaverton lays out what works best by area, and you can browse every neighborhood we serve from the Beaverton service areas directory.
The geography of this part of 97007 also makes scheduling predictable, which matters when you are coordinating an install or a repair. The streets between SW Barrows Road and SW Scholls Ferry Road sit in a compact pocket, so we can stage a crew, drop materials, and keep a multi-day job moving without the cross-town travel that slows down contractors based on the other side of the metro. For owners out toward SW 175th Avenue and the developments running south of the center, the same holds true — it is all a short drive on local roads. That proximity is part of why repair calls in particular turn around fast here: we are often already working a job a few blocks over.
What do the homeowner associations near Progress Ridge actually require? It varies by subdivision, but the common threads are consistency and approval. Most associations in these master-planned neighborhoods set a maximum height — usually 6 feet in back yards and a lower limit on anything facing the street — and many specify an approved material or color so that runs read uniformly down a block. Some require a particular cap or post style, and nearly all want the finished, good-neighbor side facing outward so the framing does not show to the street or the adjoining lot. Before we build, we read your CC&Rs against the plan, flag anything that needs adjusting, and prepare the kind of straightforward description and layout an architectural review committee expects to see.
In practice this is routine work for us, not a hurdle. Vinyl in white or a neutral tan clears most committees easily because it stays uniform and never needs repainting, which is exactly what associations are trying to protect. Cedar passes in plenty of these subdivisions too, provided the height and finished-side rules are met, and it gives a warmer look that some owners prefer for a back yard. Where a neighbor already has a fence on a shared line, matching their height and style is usually the fastest path to approval and the cleanest result on the ground. We handle the build to whatever spec the association sets — you should not have to choose between a fence that lasts and a fence that gets approved.
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. South Beaverton 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 Progress Ridge TownSquare, which is why our fences hold their line through the wettest Beaverton winters.
Knowing the area also means we know what to expect before we arrive. We have set fence on the compact lots in these subdivisions, dealt with the saturated low spots that hold water through February, and worked alongside the HOA review process enough times that none of it slows the job down. An estimate from us is not a stranger guessing at conditions — it is a crew that has built down the street and can tell you on the spot how your post line should be handled, where drainage needs attention, and what your association will approve. When you are ready to move from research to a real estimate, the next step is the transactional page for fence installation near Progress Ridge, or simply call (855) 598-3288. We will walk your property, talk through code, HOA rules, and materials, and give you a clear, no-pressure estimate.
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Fence Installation Near Progress Ridge TownSquare Beaverton FencingLocal South Beaverton crew, code- and HOA-aware builds, free on-site estimates. We answer 24/7.
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