Housing stock
1960s–1980s suburban single-family on half-acre to one-acre lots; some newer infill builds; a handful of older homes near Wayne Hills.
Suburban lots with longer driveways and larger backyard patios. Permeable paver driveways are increasingly common here.
Site conditions, housing stock, and the kinds of projects we get called for in this town — the local context behind our estimates and recommendations.
1960s–1980s suburban single-family on half-acre to one-acre lots; some newer infill builds; a handful of older homes near Wayne Hills.
The work we get called for most in Wayne, based on what the local building stock and site conditions tend to need.
Conditions specific to Wayne that shape how we approach prep, drainage, and material choice on every job.
Stone walls, retaining walls, chimney work, and structural repair. Every wall starts with the right footing and a drainage plan — that's the part most failed walls skip. We pull permits when the town requires one.
Geotechnical surveys for walls over 4 ft retained height are sub'd to a licensed engineer — we coordinate the drawings and the build.
Photos of actual Wayne projects from the last two seasons. Every project on this strip was built by our in-house crew.
The four stages we run on every masonry job. Same workflow whether it's a small fix or a full install.
We measure, check grade and drainage, and ask what you want the finished wall to do. Photos go in the file the same day.
Footing dug below the 36-inch frost line. Compacted base course of 3/4-inch clean for segmental walls; reinforced concrete footing for mortared.
Stones picked for face, hearting tied in behind. Drain tile, gravel backfill, and filter fabric on the retained side as the wall comes up.
Cap course mortared or pinned. Joints tooled, faces brushed, site swept. Walkthrough on the last day.
The four things people actually want to know before they sign an estimate.
In most Bergen and Passaic County towns, walls over 4 feet of retained height need a permit and a stamped engineering drawing. Anything below that is usually permit-exempt but still has to meet setback rules. We check with your township before we quote.
A properly footed dry-laid wall is a 50+ year structure. A mortared wall is similar provided drainage is correct. The failure mode is almost always water — freeze/thaw behind the wall — which is why we put as much work into drain tile and backfill as we do into the face.
Yes. We'll pull a stone from the existing wall to match material at the yard, and mortar joints are tooled to the same profile and color. The new section reads as part of the original wall, not a patch.
Dry-laid is typically 15–25% more labor per linear foot because the fit has to work without mortar. Mortared walls cost more in material (footing, rebar, mortar) but go faster in the field. Your estimate breaks the choice out so you can compare apples to apples.
Same crew, same workmanship warranty, short response time across the county.
Bordering Garfield to the west. Heavy demand for bluestone steps and front-yard masonry across the older Athenia and Lakeview sections.
View masonry in CliftonHistoric brick city. A lot of our Paterson work is full-façade restoration on pre-1940 row houses — that's where mortar-matching matters most.
View masonry in PatersonDense, mixed-use streets across the river. Most Passaic work is repointing and chimney repair on multi-family brick buildings.
View masonry in PassaicWe're 22 minutes from your door. Tell us what you're building and we'll walk the site, check footings and drainage, and leave you a written estimate within 24 hours.