Start with water management first—then build the yard you actually want
Forest Landscaping helps homeowners across Northwest Indiana and the Chicago Southland plan and build outdoor spaces that look great and perform well—patios, retaining walls, drainage solutions, lighting, water features, and more—backed by workmanship and product warranties.
Why new construction landscapes fail (and how to prevent it)
A durable new construction landscaping plan should account for:
A step-by-step plan for new construction landscaping (the order matters)
If you’re dealing with standing water that never dries, that’s a strong sign you need a more structured solution (for example, a collection point with underground drainage) instead of “more soil and seed.” Guidance on grading, swales, and drains is consistent across building-science resources: keep water away from the foundation and give it a controlled path.
If you’re installing pavers for a patio, driveway, or pathway, the long-term performance comes from proper excavation depth, a well-compacted stone base, correct slope away from the house, and crisp edge restraint. This is also the stage where retaining walls (if needed) should be engineered with drainage behind the wall to relieve hydrostatic pressure.
Did you know? Quick facts that help you plan smarter
Quick comparison table: common fixes for new construction water problems
| Problem | Most effective starting point | Good to know |
|---|---|---|
| Water pooling in the lawn | Regrading + swale shaping | If it’s a persistent low spot, subsurface drainage may be needed (not just more topsoil). |
| Erosion under downspouts | Solid-pipe downspout extensions to a safe outlet | Solid pipe is commonly recommended for moving water efficiently away (perforated pipe is for dispersing, not conveying). |
| Wet side yard between homes | Swale + coordinated downspout routing | Side yards often need a clear, continuous flow line—small “bumps” can trap water like a bowl. |
| Pavers settling or heaving after winter | Rebuild with correct base, compaction, and edge restraint | Freeze-thaw movement is often a base/slope issue; sealing alone won’t fix structure. |