Decks, Patios & Outdoor Structures in Summerlin South, NV
If you’re a homeowner in Summerlin South planning a new deck, concrete patio, pergola, or outdoor kitchen, you’re already dealing with a more complex approval process than most Las Vegas contractors expect. Our Decks, Patios & Outdoor Structures team at Anytime Anywhere Builders knows this market — the SCA Architectural Review Committee requirements, the caliche hardpan below your yard, the canyon winds off the Spring Mountains — and we build accordingly. Call us at (725) 444-6037 for a free estimate from a crew that knows Summerlin South before we ever break ground.

Why Anytime Anywhere Builders Is Summerlin South’s Preferred Decks, Patios & Outdoor Structures Company
We’ve completed projects across Summerlin South — from The Paseos to The Vistas — and our 613 verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars reflect a consistent record of delivering finished structures that clear both Clark County and the Summerlin Community Association’s ARC without costly holds. That review volume isn’t coincidence. It’s the result of 11 years of showing up prepared, not learning the local rules on a client’s dime.
Owner and lead technician Emily Cole personally runs every project. That means when an ARC submission comes back with a material note, Emily makes the call on the spot — no project manager relay, no lost week waiting for someone in an office to respond. Summerlin South homeowners in the 89135 zip code consistently tell us that Emily’s on-site presence is the single biggest difference from contractors they’ve used before. Built to last, not just to close — that’s the standard every job gets held to here.
Our Decks, Patios & Outdoor Structures Services in Summerlin South
Pergola & Gazebo Construction
A pergola in Summerlin South isn’t a weekend project — it’s a permitting exercise that begins well before a single post goes in the ground. Every freestanding shade structure in the 89135 area falls under Summerlin Community Association design guidelines, meaning post dimensions, roofline profiles, and material finishes must match the specific village standards for neighborhoods like The Paseos or The Vistas before Clark County will finalize the permit. We handle the full ARC submission package upfront, so your project doesn’t stall after the county permit is already in hand.
At Summerlin South’s roughly 2,400-foot elevation, canyon winds accelerate UV degradation and cause thermal cycling that splits poorly sealed wood joints within two to three seasons. We engineer pergola post connections and beam-to-ledger flashings specifically for that microclimate — heavier hardware, closed-cell sealants, and UV-stable finishes — because a structure built for the valley floor won’t perform the same way here.
Concrete Patio
Concrete patio work in Summerlin South routinely hits a hard stop — literally — when the crew reaches the caliche hardpan layer sitting 18 to 24 inches below the sandy topsoil. Standard hand excavation won’t cut it; drilling equipment is required, and that adds time and cost that contractors unfamiliar with local soil conditions routinely underestimate on their initial bids. We account for caliche excavation in every Summerlin South quote, so the number you approve is the number the project finishes at.
West- and north-facing patios here also face accelerated caulk failure from the thermal cycling and wind exposure. We use expansion joint placement and sealant specs designed for this specific exposure, not the defaults appropriate for a shielded valley-floor slab. A typical concrete patio in Summerlin South runs $12–$22 per square foot installed, depending on finish, reinforcement spec, and excavation depth required.
Outdoor Kitchen & Built-In BBQ Island
Outdoor kitchens are among the most requested upgrades we build in Summerlin South, and they’re also among the most scrutinized by the ARC. A built-in BBQ island attached to or adjacent to a covered patio structure triggers its own SCA design review — appliance placement, countertop material, and enclosure finish all get evaluated against village standards. We’ve navigated these submissions enough times that we know which material combinations tend to sail through and which ones come back with notes.
On the build side, Emily leads the structural layout personally, coordinating gas rough-in, electrical, and drainage as part of the initial scope rather than as afterthought add-ons. A fully outfitted outdoor kitchen with island, grill, side burner, refrigeration, and countertop in Summerlin South typically runs $18,000–$45,000, depending on appliance tier and whether a new patio structure is included.
Wood & Composite Decking
For elevated decks and ground-level platforms, Trex composite decking is one of our most-specified products in Summerlin South — it holds up to UV exposure and thermal cycling far better than untreated wood at this elevation, and it’s generally well-received in SCA design reviews when the color selection falls within approved palettes. We learned this firsthand on a project in The Vistas where a Trex Transcend railing color required ARC resubmission because it fell outside the village’s approved range. The footing excavation on that same job doubled in time once we hit caliche — two realities of building in Summerlin South that we now build into every scope from day one.
Wood decking remains a viable option where ARC guidelines accommodate it; we specify species and finish accordingly. A composite deck in Summerlin South runs $28–$55 per square foot installed; natural wood decks typically come in at $22–$42 per square foot, depending on species, framing complexity, and footings required.
What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
The SCA-ARC and Clark County Dual-Approval Reality in Summerlin South
This regulatory layer is the defining factor that separates a Summerlin South outdoor project from the same project built two miles away in Spring Valley or Centennial Hills. Because Summerlin South sits within the Howard Hughes Corporation’s master-planned Summerlin community, every exterior structural change — including a freestanding pergola, a retaining wall, a patio cover, or a deck — requires written approval from the Summerlin Community Association’s Architectural Review Committee before Clark County will finalize the building permit. The ARC evaluates material colors, post and beam dimensions, roof pitch, and finish against village-specific design standards. Miss that step, or submit without the right documentation, and the ARC can demand material changes that force a complete re-permitting cycle.

Experienced Summerlin South contractors know that rooftop equipment, solar panels, and even visible satellite dishes technically require ARC pre-approval — homeowners routinely discover this after Clark County has already issued the permit, triggering costly re-submissions and project holds. We submit the ARC package and the Clark County permit application in a coordinated sequence built around SCA review timelines, which typically run two to four weeks longer than a straight county permit. Budget and timeline both need to reflect that reality from the first conversation.
Trusted Brands We Work With in Summerlin South
Our material portfolio for Summerlin South outdoor projects includes Trex composite decking and railing systems, James Hardie fiber cement trim and fascia boards, and LP SmartSide for structural sheathing where applicable — all products that hold up to Summerlin South’s UV intensity and thermal cycling better than commodity alternatives. For pergola and gazebo projects requiring window or skylight integration, we work with VELUX, Andersen Windows, Pella, and Marvin, and we specify JELD-WEN where project budgets call for it. These aren’t just names we drop — Emily is a certified installer for these brands and knows how each product actually performs in this desert climate at elevation.
Common Outdoor Structure Problems We See in Summerlin South Homes
- Caliche hardpan cost overruns on footing excavation: Deck and patio footings in Summerlin South’s sandy topsoil routinely hit caliche hardpan within 18–24 inches. Contractors who don’t account for drilling equipment in their excavation bids leave homeowners with underbid projects that stall mid-pour.
- ARC submission failures after Clark County permit issuance: Pulling a Clark County building permit for a pergola or patio cover without first clearing SCA Architectural Review Committee approval is a costly mistake. The ARC can require material or color changes that force full re-permitting, adding weeks and expense to a project that looked ready to start.
- Premature joint separation on west- and north-facing structures: Canyon winds and sharp thermal cycling at Summerlin South’s 2,400-foot elevation accelerate caulk failure and UV degradation faster than valley-floor conditions. Contractors unfamiliar with the microclimate underseal structural joints at installation, leading to visible separation within two or three seasons.
- Material palette mismatches in The Paseos and The Vistas: The late-1990s through mid-2000s stucco-and-concrete-tile homes in these villages carry specific design standards. Decking colors, pergola finishes, and patio cover materials that look reasonable in a showroom can fail ARC review if they don’t match village-specific approved palettes — a mismatch that experienced Summerlin South contractors learn to check before ordering materials.
Pricing for Decks, Patios & Outdoor Structures in Summerlin South, NV
Here’s what Summerlin South projects typically cost, based on our work in the 89135 area:
- Concrete patio (standard finish): $12–$22 per square foot installed
- Composite deck (Trex): $28–$55 per square foot installed
- Wood deck: $22–$42 per square foot installed
- Pergola or shade structure: $9,000–$28,000 depending on size, material, and engineering spec
- Outdoor kitchen with island: $18,000–$45,000 depending on appliance selection and whether a new patio cover is included
- Retaining wall: $35–$85 per square foot depending on height, material, and caliche excavation required
Every Summerlin South quote we write includes ARC submission preparation and Clark County permitting as line items — not afterthought additions once the project starts. Caliche excavation is estimated on-site before we finalize footing costs. Call (725) 444-6037 for a free on-site estimate; we’ll give you a real number, not a range that balloons after demo day.
We Also Serve Cities Near Summerlin South
Our deck, patio, and outdoor structure work extends throughout the greater Las Vegas area. Beyond Summerlin South, we regularly serve homeowners and businesses in Spring Valley, Winchester, Enterprise, and Paradise. Each of these neighboring communities has its own permitting environment — notably without the SCA-ARC layer that defines Summerlin South — and we adjust our project planning accordingly. Call (725) 444-6037 to confirm service availability in your area.
Serving Summerlin South, NV — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Summerlin South 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 Summerlin South
Yes — every exterior structure in Summerlin South requires Summerlin Community Association Architectural Review Committee approval before Clark County will issue a final permit. The ARC reviews material colors, post dimensions, roofline profiles, and finish choices against village-specific design standards. This dual-approval process typically adds two to four weeks to a project timeline compared to building the same structure in an unincorporated area like Spring Valley. Contractors who skip the ARC submission and go straight to Clark County create costly holds when the ARC later requires material changes that force re-permitting. Call (725) 444-6037 — we handle the full ARC package as part of our standard scope.
Summerlin South’s sandy topsoil sits directly above a caliche hardpan layer that typically begins 18 to 24 inches down. Standard hand excavation equipment can’t break through it — drilling is required, which adds both equipment cost and labor time that contractors unfamiliar with local soil conditions don’t account for in initial bids. We assess excavation depth on-site during the estimating visit and build the realistic drilling cost into your quote before you approve anything. Call (725) 444-6037 for a site-specific estimate that reflects actual soil conditions.
The SCA doesn’t publish a universal approved-product list, but in our experience building in The Paseos and The Vistas, Trex Transcend composite decking in muted, earth-tone finishes clears ARC review most consistently. Brighter or high-contrast railing colors are more likely to come back with palette notes — we saw this firsthand on a Vistas project where the original Trex railing color required resubmission. Natural wood decking in approved stain tones is also acceptable in many villages. The key is submitting a complete color and material board with your ARC application rather than relying on product descriptions alone. Call (725) 444-6037 and we’ll walk you through the submission package.
Summerlin South sits at roughly 2,400 feet against the Spring Mountains escarpment, making it significantly windier than the valley floor — and that wind exposure changes how pergolas and shade structures need to be engineered and sealed. West- and north-facing structures bear the brunt of canyon wind and sharp thermal cycling, which accelerates caulk failure, splits unsealed wood joints, and degrades standard UV sealants faster than valley-floor conditions. We specify heavier post-to-beam hardware, closed-cell sealants rated for thermal cycling, and UV-stable finishes on every Summerlin South pergola — not because it’s required by code, but because structures built to valley-floor standards simply don’t hold up here. Call (725) 444-6037 to discuss the right spec for your site.
No — a built-in BBQ island or outdoor kitchen attached to or adjacent to a covered patio structure triggers its own SCA Architectural Review Committee evaluation in Summerlin South. Appliance placement, countertop material, and enclosure finish are all subject to village design standards, and the ARC reviews them separately from the patio cover or pergola application. We coordinate the outdoor kitchen and the patio structure into a single ARC submission where possible to avoid sequential review delays. Call (725) 444-6037 and Emily will walk through exactly what the ARC will ask for on your specific project.
Ready to Build in Summerlin South?
If you’re planning a deck, patio, pergola, outdoor kitchen, or retaining wall in Summerlin South, the smartest first step is a site visit with someone who knows the SCA-ARC process, the caliche soil, and the canyon-wind exposure that shapes every project in the 89135 zip code. Emily Cole leads every Anytime Anywhere Builders project personally — from ARC submission through Clark County sign-off and final inspection. 613 homeowners have trusted us with their homes. Call (725) 444-6037 today for a free, on-site estimate. No vague ranges, no surprises after demo day — just a clear scope built for how Summerlin South actually works.
Reviewed by Emily Cole, Owner & Lead Technician at Anytime Anywhere Builders Las Vegas Construction, serving Summerlin South since 2014.