Hardscape and Landscape Construction in San Diego (Costs, Drainage, and What People Regret Later)

Outdoor projects are popular in San Diego because the space is used year-round. They are also where homeowners most often regret skipping planning, especially around drainage, base preparation, and permit triggers.

This article explains what truly affects cost and long-term performance.

Hardscape vs Landscape

Hardscape typically includes concrete, pavers, patios, walkways, retaining walls, steps, and seat walls.

Landscape typically includes planting, soil preparation, irrigation, drainage, and grading.

Most projects include both. Costs increase quickly when the scope is unclear.

Drainage Is a Quiet Cost Driver

Drainage is not optional. It is one of the most common causes of early failure:

  • Pooling water
  • Settling pavers
  • Soil movement
  • Cracking and staining

Adding significant hard surface almost always requires drainage planning.

Base Preparation and Soil Conditions

Failures usually occur because of poor base preparation, not material choice.

Critical factors include:

  • Compaction quality
  • Base thickness
  • Slope direction
  • Soil behavior

Base work is the real work. It should never be treated as a shortcut.

Retaining Walls and Permits

Retaining walls are often assumed to be simple. Permits may be required depending on height and what the wall supports.

If a wall supports a driveway, walkway, fence, or surcharge, requirements can change significantly.

Material Selection Should Match Use

Good material choices consider:

  • Sun and heat exposure
  • Slip resistance
  • Maintenance tolerance
  • Drainage and joint systems

Looks alone should not drive decisions.

Common Mistakes That Cause Rework

  • Ignoring drainage until after installation
  • Mixing materials without transition planning
  • Underestimating demolition and haul-off
  • Building walls or flatwork without understanding permit triggers

    FAQ

    Access, demolition, base prep, drainage, and wall requirements vary widely.

    Often yes, depending on height and surcharge.

    Sometimes, but base and edge restraint can change the math.

    Skipping drainage and base preparation.

    Scroll to Top