
Peyton, Colorado
Composite Decks in Peyton, CO
Composite decking is the low-maintenance answer to Peyton's climate — wind and hail both drive material choice — composite plus covers do well, plus the UV load at 7,093 ft that fades untreated wood in a few seasons.
Local · Family-owned · 5-star rated
Composite Decks built for Peyton homes
Composite decking is the low-maintenance answer to Peyton's climate — wind and hail both drive material choice — composite plus covers do well, plus the UV load at 7,093 ft that fades untreated wood in a few seasons. Capped composite lines hold color well, don't splinter, and need a rinse instead of a re-stain every year.
We install composite tops over a proper pressure-treated substructure. When the build calls for it, we can spec hidden fasteners, joist tape, and picture-frame borders — the details that make composite last.
- Free on-site design consultation
- Written, itemized estimate
- Licensed and insured
- We stand behind our work
Other services in Peyton
Composite Decks in nearby areas
Composite Decks in Peyton, Colorado — designed and built around your home
All Custom Deck is one of the deck builders Colorado Springs Peyton homeowners have called on for over fifteen years. Family-owned, fully licensed and insured — every composite decks we touch is designed, engineered, and built by our own in-house crew.
The local site drives every design decision — the full sun; heat load matters on west-facing decks, sandy clay on higher-ground lots, and how the composite decks has to tie into newer 2000s+ two-stories on 2.5–5 acre lots. Get those wrong up front and no amount of pretty decking fixes it later.
We don't sell packages. Every composite decks in Peyton is designed to fit the yard, the house, and how the family actually uses the space.
We'd rather lose a bid on a vague handshake than win one. Ask for the paperwork — we already have it ready.
Recently in Peyton
We've built composite decks for Peyton homeowners in Latigo Trails, Woodmen Hills corridor, Meridian Ranch edge — projects sized to the open plains rolling up toward the Palmer Divide, oriented around the Meridian Ranch community and the full sun; heat load matters on west-facing decks, and detailed to fit newer 2000s+ two-stories on 2.5–5 acre lots. If your address is near any of those neighborhoods, chances are we've built something close by.
Our process
How we build your composite decks in Peyton
Every composite decks project in Peyton follows the same straightforward path — one that's shaped by the open plains rolling up toward the Palmer Divide, wind and hail both drive material choice — composite plus covers do well, and the character of newer 2000s+ two-stories on 2.5–5 acre lots homes.
- 01
On-site consultation
We start on-site — walking your Peyton yard, listening to how you want to use the space, and measuring what's actually there. No template designs, no high-pressure quotes.
- 02
Personalized design & written estimate
Design happens around the specifics: Falcon border setback, the full sun; heat load matters on west-facing decks, and how the composite decks needs to read against newer 2000s+ two-stories on 2.5–5 acre lots.
- 03
Expert build
Framing is inspected before we ever lay decking or set posts. Fasteners, flashings, and hardware are specified for our climate — not the generic big-box list.
- 04
Final walkthrough & warranty
Because we're local (30 minutes from Colorado Springs), you get a phone call answered when you have a question a year in.
Materials & finishes
Materials chosen for Peyton
Every composite decks we build in Peyton pairs the right materials with the site — the full sun; heat load matters on west-facing decks, sandy clay on higher-ground lots, and how the build has to tie into newer 2000s+ two-stories on 2.5–5 acre lots.
Capped Composite Decking
Long-wearing capped boards chosen for the UV load at 7,093 ft. We steer to mid-tones on south- and west-facing decks so heat-gain and fade stay in check.
Pressure-Treated Substructure
Code-compliant framing spaced to the composite maker's spec (often 12–16" o.c. depending on the line) — the hidden work that decides how a composite deck ages.
Hidden Fasteners & Picture-Frame Border
Fastener-free surface with a clean picture-frame edge. Cut ends are hidden; expansion gaps are set for our temperature swings.
Aluminum & Cable Railings
Railings sized for significant sustained wind — powder-coated aluminum, cable, or matching composite top rail.
Joist Tape & Flashing
Butyl joist tape on every joist top and proper ledger flashing where the deck meets the house — the two details that dictate substructure lifespan.
Built for Peyton
Local conditions, real construction details
Building a long-lasting composite decks in Peyton isn't the same as building one in Denver or Phoenix. At 7,093 ft with open plains rolling up toward the Palmer Divide, we engineer every composite decks for the site — footings sized below frost line, ledger boards flashed to keep meltwater off newer 2000s+ two-stories on 2.5–5 acre lots siding, and fasteners rated for the temperature swings we get on the the Meridian Ranch community side of town.
Because we build across the Pikes Peak region — Colorado Springs, Peyton, and neighboring cities — the crew has seen the failure modes: bad flashings, undersized joists, cheap composite in south-facing sun. We build the opposite of those.
Built for 7,093 ft
High-altitude UV fades untreated wood fast. We finish every Peyton composite decks with sealers and stains rated for altitude sun.
High wind exposure
Significant sustained wind — post spacing, hardware, and railing profiles are all specified around your specific lot.
Frost-depth footings
Piers poured below the local frost line so nothing heaves in spring thaw. Non-negotiable on sandy clay on higher-ground lots.
Hail-tolerant detailing
Since wind and hail both drive material choice — composite plus covers do well, we spec composite tops and aluminum louvers that shrug off Peyton's hail cycle.
Tuned to your full sun; heat load matters on west-facing decks
Deck layout, shade structures, and finish colors are picked around how sun tracks across your specific Peyton lot.
Composite Decks FAQs — Peyton
+ Which composite works best for Peyton?
At 7,093 ft the biggest concerns are UV fade and heat gain. We steer clients toward mid-tone boards on south- and west-facing decks in Peyton's full sun; heat load matters on west-facing decks, and we bring samples to the on-site visit.
+ Is composite worth it compared to cedar in Peyton?
For most Peyton homeowners, yes — cedar looks great but typically needs a re-stain every 1–2 years thanks to wind and hail both drive material choice — composite plus covers do well and high-altitude UV. Composite costs more up front and roughly evens out over time.
+ Does composite hold up to Peyton's weather?
The board itself is the easy part; the substructure is where quality shows up. We frame every Peyton composite deck for the local climate and follow the composite maker's joist-spacing spec.
+ Can you install composite over my existing frame in Peyton?
Only if the frame is sound and spaced correctly for composite. We inspect first — many older Peyton decks are joisted at 24" o.c., which is too wide for most composite lines. If it's close, we sister joists; if not, we reframe.
+ Do you install hidden fasteners and picture-frame borders in Peyton?
Yes — both are standard on our composite installs. A picture-frame border cleans up cut ends, and hidden clips keep the surface fastener-free.
+ How long does a composite deck last in Peyton?
Manufacturer warranties vary by product line — we walk through the current options at the on-site visit. A properly framed substructure and a well-installed composite top hold up for a long time in Peyton's climate with minimal upkeep.
