This backyard in Olathe had the kind of view every homeowner dreams of—but no real way to enjoy it.
1. The Project or Problem
We met a family in Olathe this spring who had one of those backyards that almost felt wasted. From the kitchen window, you could see a row of mature maples casting shifting shade, a small slope down into a wildflower patch, and even the edge of a neighborhood walking trail. The only problem? The “outdoor space” was nothing more than a narrow concrete pad left over from the home’s original build. A grill barely fit. The family’s folding chairs sank into the grass every time it rained.
The homeowners kept describing the space as “a missed opportunity.” Their kids loved chasing fireflies at dusk, but there was no place to sit and watch. The dad joked that their dog had claimed the only usable corner, which quickly became a mud pit after every storm.
They had been talking for years about a deck but never quite pulled the trigger because they weren’t sure what direction to take. A big, sprawling multi-level deck felt overwhelming. A simple rectangle didn’t seem worth the investment. They wanted something that made the view part of daily life—not just an afterthought.
That was the challenge we walked into: how do you design a deck that’s not just a platform, but a bridge between a home and its landscape?
2. The Discovery
As we sat with them sketching ideas, we remembered a section we put together about Olathe projects on our site—this page that really captures what it means to “dream big with a pro” when it comes to decks.
The page talks about something we’ve learned over and over: in Olathe, decks aren’t just outdoor add-ons—they’re lifestyle pieces. Because so many homes here back up to wooded trails, sloped lawns, or open skies, the real design question isn’t “what size should my deck be?” but “what’s the experience I want every time I step outside?”
That little reminder shifted the conversation. Instead of fretting about square footage and railing styles, we started asking: Do you want a space for quiet morning coffee? A lively family barbecue hub? A place to string lights and gather neighbors on summer nights?
That shift came straight out of the ideas we’d already put down in writing—ideas we realized we should be carrying into every backyard conversation.
3. What It Made Us Think
The funny thing is, most people who first call us think a deck is a matter of lumber, nails, and maybe a design sketch. But projects like this remind us that it’s really about atmosphere. A deck becomes a stage for the life you want to live outside.
In this case, the family didn’t need a massive, multi-level showpiece. What they needed was a structure that stretched the usable space just enough to give them room to breathe. We realized the best option was a wraparound shape that curved slightly toward the treeline—an invitation to step into the view.
It made us think about how often homeowners focus on size first: “We want a big deck.” But size doesn’t always equal satisfaction. We’ve seen oversized decks that end up feeling empty, like a parking lot nobody uses. The real measure of success is whether the space feels natural, balanced, and connected to how people already live.
Here, the lesson was about restraint. By designing a mid-sized deck with just enough room for a dining table, a lounge corner, and a little pathway of steps leading into the yard, we turned that neglected backyard into a true extension of the home. The scale didn’t overwhelm the garden below or the view beyond. It simply framed it.
4. Small Wins, Lessons, or Plans
The build itself had a few small but satisfying wins. For starters, we picked a composite decking material that held up to the family’s playful dog and the inevitable muddy paws. Instead of railings on the garden-facing side, we kept the edges open with wide, low steps that almost felt like an invitation into the grass.
We added a pergola beam over one corner—not a full roof, but just enough for shade cloth and string lights. On the first evening after install, we stretched those lights across the posts and watched the glow turn the deck into a soft gathering place. You could see the family instantly picture their summer nights there.
Another detail we loved: we curved the board layout slightly on the wraparound section. It was subtle, but it made the deck echo the soft slope of the yard. Instead of fighting the natural grade, the deck leaned into it.
We could have gone bigger, taller, flashier. But sometimes the right move is simpler: make space that breathes with the yard, not against it.
That’s a design lesson we’ll carry forward—because not every win is in scale or material. Sometimes it’s in how well the final result feels inevitable, like it was always supposed to be there.
5. Wrap-Up / Reflection
Walking away from this project, what stuck with us wasn’t just the finished deck—it was the way the family used it immediately. On the first weekend, we drove by and saw kids perched on the steps with popsicles, the parents leaning back in chairs under the lights, and yes—the dog claiming a corner, only this time without sinking into the mud.
It reminded us that good design doesn’t shout. It hums quietly in the background of life.
If you’re in Olathe, thinking about a project like this, our takeaway would be: start with the experience you want, not the structure you think you need. The rest falls into place more naturally than you’d expect.
HASHTAGS
#BackyardGoals #OlatheHomes #DeckDesign #NeighborhoodNotes #OutdoorVibes #GardenPlanning #KansasLiving #DesignDetails #NaturalSpaces #HomeByDesign









