The view was great—until you stepped outside.
That’s what our client, Matt, told us with a half-laugh the first time we walked through his backyard in Marshfield. From the sunroom, everything looked picture-perfect: mature oaks swaying gently, a peek of cranberry bogs beyond the fence, and plenty of natural light. But as soon as you opened the slider and stepped out, the illusion vanished.
There was no real landing—just a cracked concrete stoop. A few weathered pavers, half-sunk into the soft earth, led vaguely toward the lawn. It wasn’t just unfinished; it was uncomfortable. Matt’s dogs had worn a muddy track down the middle. His kids, twin 8-year-olds, had mostly given up trying to play out there unless it was dry.
“We always talk about fixing it,” he said. “But I guess we didn’t know where to start.”
The Project: A Deck That Could Do More Than Just Sit There
At first glance, it seemed straightforward: they wanted a deck. Something that looked nice, gave them room to grill, maybe set up a few chairs. But the more we stood in that backyard with Matt and his partner, Jen, the more it became clear they needed something smarter than just a flat rectangle attached to the house.
Their yard had a natural slope—barely noticeable until it rained, and the runoff gathered along the left edge like a shallow stream. The previous homeowner had patched together a makeshift solution with gravel trenches and stacked bricks, but it never held up.
The family also had big dreams: outdoor movie nights, a hammock corner, maybe a small garden off the back. But right now, the disjointed flow made it hard to imagine any of that coming together.
“We just want a space we’ll actually use,” Jen said.
That was our cue to pause and rethink things.
The Discovery: Reframing the Deck as a Transition, Not Just a Platform
Back at the office, we pulled up our Marshfield service page—South Shore Decks Corp. – Marshfield—because it sums up something we’ve been reminding a lot of clients lately: a deck isn’t just a surface. It’s a connection point—between home and yard, indoors and outdoors, everyday life and weekend dreaming.
That page breaks down the different types of deck layouts we build in Marshfield: multi-level platforms, integrated stairs, wraparound transitions. We’d even added a section on elevation-based planning—how to take advantage of slope rather than fight it.
Revisiting that reminded us of something important:
Good decks solve problems you didn’t know were part of the project.
So instead of defaulting to the usual layout, we started sketching something a little different.
What It Made Us Think: It’s Not Just Where You Sit—It’s Where You Move
Here’s what changed our thinking.
Instead of building one large, high deck off the sunroom, we designed a tiered platform system:
A main level that meets the slider, with enough space for a table and lounge chairs
A mid-step platform angled toward the side gate, doubling as casual seating
A lower landing that gently transitions into the yard—with built-in planters framing the steps
This layout did a few things at once:
Redirected water: We built in a discreet channel under the middle tier to manage runoff without visible drains.
Opened up zones: The kids now had a flat, safe space to run off to, while the adults could stay on the main level without feeling isolated.
Respected the yard: No more jarring step-down onto uneven ground. Every level offered a moment of pause.
Matt joked that it felt like “a little boardwalk leading into our own backyard park.”
We didn’t realize how much movement mattered in a space like this until we stepped back and looked at the plan. Too often, people think about decks as places to plop furniture. But when you shape the layout to support flow, the space becomes far more dynamic.
It reminded us of other projects where the biggest win wasn’t square footage—it was how well the space invited you in.
Small Wins and the Shape of a Better Space
By the end of the third week, the structure was in.
The cedar tones popped against the green lawn, and the staggered lines of the steps cast long, soft shadows in the late afternoon. We added hidden lighting strips beneath the stair risers—just enough to glow, not glare.
Jen found a set of low-profile, weatherproof beanbags for the lower landing. “I think this will be the kids’ reading spot,” she said, beaming.
Matt strung up café lights from the fence post to the corner of the sunroom. “Didn’t think I’d get emotional about outdoor lighting,” he admitted. “But this already feels like somewhere we’ll stay.”
We didn’t build everything on their wishlist—no pergola (yet), no firepit. But that’s part of the point. You don’t need to do it all at once.
You just need a space that sets you up for everything else.
The Takeaway: Start With How You Want to Feel Out There
If you’re in Marshfield and thinking about adding a deck, here’s something we keep learning again and again:
Don’t start with furniture dimensions. Don’t start with Pinterest.
Start with this question:
How do you want to feel when you step outside?
In Matt and Jen’s case, the answer was: welcomed, connected, relaxed. The deck just needed to match that.
Sometimes, a project reminds us why we do what we do. Not because we love wood grain (though we do), or because layout geometry is oddly satisfying (also true)—but because good design unlocks good living.
And in a town like Marshfield, where nature is always part of the backdrop, it’s worth building spaces that bring it even closer.
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