Decks, Patios & Outdoor Structures in Enterprise, NV
If you’re an Enterprise homeowner planning a deck, patio, pergola, or outdoor kitchen, you need a contractor who already understands Clark County’s permitting process, knows the Southern Highlands HOA’s Architectural Review Committee requirements, and has built on the same mid-2000s tract-home slabs that define this neighborhood. Our Decks, Patios & Outdoor Structures crew reaches Enterprise job sites quickly from our Las Vegas base — and we come prepared, not learning on your dime. Call (725) 444-6037 for a free, no-obligation estimate.

Why Anytime Anywhere Builders Las Vegas Construction Is Enterprise’s Preferred Decks, Patios & Outdoor Structures Company
Emily Cole — owner and lead technician at Anytime Anywhere Builders — has spent 11 years working in the Las Vegas metro, including extensive project work throughout Enterprise and its master-planned communities. Emily doesn’t hand projects off to a project manager and disappear; she’s on site making real decisions, which means the homeowner talks directly to the person holding the saw and reading the county drawings. That accountability matters when you’re navigating both a Clark County Building Department permit and an HOA Architectural Review Committee submission at the same time.
613 verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars reflect what consistent, owner-led delivery actually looks like across hundreds of real projects. Enterprise homeowners have come to rely on that track record specifically because the area’s dual-track approval process — county permit plus HOA ARC — punishes contractors who don’t sequence the paperwork correctly. We’ve done this enough times in Enterprise’s 89139 zip code to know exactly what the Southern Highlands ARC wants to see before they’ll sign off, and we build that lead time into every project schedule from day one.
Our Decks, Patios & Outdoor Structures Services in Enterprise
Pergola & Gazebo Construction
Pergolas are the single most requested outdoor structure in Enterprise right now — and for good reason. A steel-framed pergola over a patio or deck drops the felt temperature by 20 degrees or more during those 115°F-plus July afternoons, which transforms a backyard that was otherwise unusable into real living space. We spec pergola framing for Enterprise’s thermal expansion demands and submit material samples to the HOA ARC well before pulling the Clark County permit, so the approval tracks run in parallel rather than sequentially. A typical pergola or gazebo installation in Enterprise runs $8,500–$22,000 depending on size, materials, and whether electrical for fans or lighting is included.
Concrete Patio
The original concrete patios poured during the 2000s tract buildout throughout Enterprise were thin, often unreinforced, and installed fast. After 15-plus years of thermal cycling above 115°F, those slabs are cracking at control joints and spalling at the surface — and we’re seeing it at scale, on nearly identical-vintage homes within the same subdivisions, all at the same time. We repair, resurface, or full-replace concrete patio slabs using heat-rated mixes, and we never pour exterior concrete during midday summer hours in Enterprise — full stop. A new concrete patio in Enterprise typically runs $6–$14 per square foot installed, with resurfacing overlays ranging $3–$7 per square foot.
Wood & Composite Decking
Builder-grade pressure-treated wood deck framing installed in Enterprise’s tract homes during the early 2000s is now warping, splitting, and throwing fasteners after 15-plus years of sustained Mojave heat cycling. Composite decking — specifically Trex boards, which we install and spec regularly — holds dimensional stability through that thermal range far better than natural wood and doesn’t require annual sealing in the desert sun. For Enterprise homeowners inside HOA-governed communities, we submit Trex color and material samples to the Architectural Review Committee before breaking ground. Composite deck installations in Enterprise run $28–$55 per square foot fully installed; wood decking runs $18–$34 per square foot.
Outdoor Kitchen
An outdoor kitchen built on a 20-year-old Enterprise patio slab requires a hard look at the rough-in plumbing and gas connections before any countertop or appliance goes in. Builder-grade copper fittings installed during the mid-2000s boom corrode faster in Enterprise than in most other parts of the country because Clark County’s Colorado River water supply carries extreme mineral hardness — we factor plumbing rough-in replacement into almost every outdoor kitchen project we scope here. A fully equipped outdoor kitchen in Enterprise typically runs $12,000–$35,000 depending on footprint, appliances, countertop material, and whether the existing slab needs reinforcement or extension.
Retaining Wall
Grade changes and drainage management in Enterprise’s master-planned communities often require engineered retaining walls that meet Clark County structural review standards. We design and build retaining walls using materials that handle Mojave heat expansion without cracking — a detail that matters on the same lot types where patio slabs have already failed from the same force. Retaining wall projects in Enterprise typically run $35–$65 per linear foot depending on wall height, materials, and whether a drainage system is included.
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The Two-Track Approval System Every Enterprise Outdoor Project Requires
This is the piece that trips up out-of-area contractors more than anything else in Enterprise. Because Enterprise is an unincorporated Clark County community — not an incorporated city — there is no municipal building department. Every permit flows through the Clark County Building Department. That’s step one. Step two is the HOA Architectural Review Committee, which operates on its own calendar entirely. In Southern Highlands and similar master-planned sections of 89139, the ARC can legally hold a fully permitted exterior project for 30–45 days if submitted material samples or color palettes don’t match pre-cleared community standards. These two tracks don’t run in sequence — a contractor who waits for ARC approval before filing with Clark County adds six to eight weeks to a project before a single post is set.
We file both simultaneously. We submit Trex composite samples, concrete overlay specs, and pergola framing drawings to the HOA review board on the same day we submit the Clark County permit application. We’ve had jobs in Southern Highlands where a previous contractor had already burned through the homeowner’s patience by filing one at a time. We came in, cleared both hurdles in parallel, and broke ground without an HOA stop-work notice. That’s not a workaround — it’s just knowing how Enterprise actually works.

We saw this firsthand on a Southern Highlands job where the original builder had poured a thin, unreinforced concrete patio slab during the mid-2000s tract buildout. By summer, it had developed a spiderweb of thermal expansion cracks from repeated 115°F-plus days, and the slab surface had spalled badly at the joints. We submitted Trex composite decking samples and a concrete overlay spec to the Southern Highlands ARC at the same time we filed our Clark County permit application — clearing both tracks before we ever broke ground. The finished project: a Trex-surfaced raised deck with a steel-framed pergola overhead, delivered on schedule, no HOA stop-work notice, and no midday concrete pours during July heat.
Trusted Brands We Work With in Enterprise
For outdoor structures in Enterprise’s heat and sun exposure, material selection isn’t cosmetic — it’s structural. We work with Trex composite decking for its dimensional stability under extreme thermal cycling, and James Hardie products for exterior trim and fascia applications where wood would fail within a few seasons. Where outdoor structures connect to the home’s envelope — pergola attachments, covered patio ledgers, exterior door openings — we incorporate Andersen, Pella, Marvin, and JELD-WEN products as needed, installed to manufacturer spec so warranties stay intact. LP SmartSide and VELUX products round out our outdoor living build portfolio for covered structures requiring ventilation or skylight elements.
Common Decks, Patios & Outdoor Structures Problems We See in Enterprise Homes
- Warped and splitting wood deck framing from 2000s-era tract construction. Builder-grade pressure-treated lumber installed during the Enterprise housing boom is now 15-plus years old and failing under sustained Mojave heat cycles above 115°F. Original fasteners are backing out of dried, shrunken lumber on nearly every block in the same vintage tracts — a block-by-block failure mode, not a random one.
- Thermal cracking in original concrete patio slabs. The thin, fast-poured slabs from the mid-2000s buildout are fracturing at control joints as cumulative thermal expansion and contraction take their toll. In Southern Highlands and similar Enterprise subdivisions, identically-aged homes are showing the same cracks at the same intervals — because they were all built on the same spec with the same shortcuts.
- Corroded outdoor kitchen plumbing and gas rough-ins. Enterprise’s Colorado River water supply carries extreme mineral hardness that degrades builder-grade copper fittings faster than national averages. Outdoor kitchen structures built during the 2000s boom are hitting premature plumbing failure that forces a teardown of the structure before the appliances have run their reasonable service life.
- HOA stop-work notices from improper permit sequencing. Contractors who pull only a Clark County Building Department permit — without simultaneously filing with the HOA Architectural Review Committee — regularly receive stop-work notices in Enterprise’s master-planned communities. The ARC approval process in Southern Highlands can legally consume 30–45 days, and it runs parallel to, not after, the county permit process.
Pricing for Decks, Patios & Outdoor Structures in Enterprise, NV
Enterprise outdoor structure pricing reflects both material specs required for Mojave heat performance and the timeline overhead built into dual-track HOA and Clark County permitting. Here’s what to expect in the current Enterprise market:
- Composite decking (Trex): $28–$55 per square foot installed
- Wood decking: $18–$34 per square foot installed
- Concrete patio (new pour): $6–$14 per square foot installed
- Concrete resurfacing/overlay: $3–$7 per square foot
- Pergola or gazebo: $8,500–$22,000 depending on size and electrical
- Outdoor kitchen: $12,000–$35,000 depending on footprint and appliances
- Retaining wall: $35–$65 per linear foot
What drives costs up in Enterprise specifically: heat-rated material upgrades, plumbing rough-in replacements in outdoor kitchen projects, ARC submission fees, and any slab reinforcement required before structure load is added. Call (725) 444-6037 — estimates are free and we’ll walk you through the full permit and HOA sequence so there are no surprises.
We Also Serve Cities Near Enterprise
Our deck, patio, and outdoor structure work extends throughout the southwest Las Vegas valley. Beyond Enterprise, we regularly complete projects in Spring Valley, Paradise, Winchester, and Summerlin South — each with its own housing stock characteristics and HOA landscape. If you’re in any of these communities, the same owner-led team and the same Clark County permitting expertise apply.
Serving Enterprise, NV — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Enterprise area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Decks, Patios & Outdoor Structures in Enterprise
Yes — both are required, and they must run on parallel tracks, not sequentially. Because Enterprise is unincorporated Clark County, your pergola permit goes through the Clark County Building Department, not a city office. At the same time, the Southern Highlands HOA Architectural Review Committee must approve your submitted material samples and structural drawings before any work begins — and that ARC process alone can take 30–45 days. Filing one after the other adds six to eight weeks of unnecessary delay. We file both simultaneously on day one. Call (725) 444-6037 to get the paperwork moving the right way from the start.
Because they were all built on the same spec, at the same time, with the same shortcuts. During the mid-2000s tract buildout, concrete patios in Enterprise were poured thin and often without adequate reinforcement to cut costs at scale. After 15-plus years of thermal cycling — with summer highs routinely above 115°F — cumulative expansion and contraction have fractured those slabs at control joints across entire subdivisions simultaneously. It’s not bad luck; it’s a predictable failure mode appearing at scale in identically-aged homes. We resurface, repair, or full-replace depending on slab condition. Call (725) 444-6037 for a free assessment.
Trex composite decking outperforms natural wood in Enterprise’s climate by a significant margin. Builder-grade pressure-treated lumber shrinks, warps, and throws fasteners under sustained Mojave heat cycling — we’re replacing failed wood deck framing throughout Enterprise’s 2000s-era tracts right now. Trex composite boards maintain dimensional stability through that thermal range, don’t require annual sealing, and hold color without the UV bleaching that strips wood finishes in the desert sun. We’re a certified Trex installer and submit Trex material samples to HOA review boards regularly. Call (725) 444-6037 to discuss the right spec for your yard.
Sometimes yes, sometimes no — it depends on slab thickness, reinforcement, and current cracking. Many original Enterprise slabs are thin enough that adding the point load of an outdoor kitchen structure requires either a new pour over the existing slab or a partial tear-out and replacement in the kitchen footprint. We also inspect the existing plumbing and gas rough-in connections before any outdoor kitchen build here, because builder-grade copper fittings in Enterprise corrode faster than average due to Colorado River water mineral hardness. We’ll give you an honest assessment before recommending a path. Call (725) 444-6037 for a free on-site look.
Enterprise takes longer than Henderson or incorporated Las Vegas neighborhoods that don’t have active HOA architectural review requirements — typically by four to six weeks when a contractor doesn’t file both tracks simultaneously. Henderson has its own municipal building department and many neighborhoods without mandatory ARC review; Las Vegas incorporated areas operate similarly. Enterprise combines Clark County’s permit process with mandatory HOA ARC review in communities like Southern Highlands, and the ARC board meets on its own schedule, not yours. A contractor who knows to file with both on day one recovers most of that time. We budget the dual-track timeline into every Enterprise project proposal so the schedule you sign reflects reality. Call (725) 444-6037 for a full timeline estimate.
Reviewed by Emily Cole, Owner & Lead Technician at Anytime Anywhere Builders Las Vegas Construction, serving Enterprise, NV and the greater Las Vegas valley since 2014.