They Had an Outdoor Space That Wasn’t Working on Either Level. Here’s What We Built Instead.

When an outdoor space has deteriorated to the point where starting fresh makes more sense than saving what’s there, a full custom build isn’t just the better investment, it’s often the only one that actually solves the problem. Our project in Stonehaven is a good example of what that looks like.
What they had and why starting over made sense
The house had two levels of outdoor space and neither one was being used. On the lower level, a concrete slab that had cracked and stained its way past any cosmetic fix and was chalky, tired, and collecting leaves. Above it sat a wood deck that had been through too many Charlotte summers: boards gone soft, structure questionable, a canvas awning that sagged more than it shaded. The whole thing had that feeling of a space the family had mentally checked out of.


They weren’t wrong to check out. It wasn’t working. The key decision: to patch it or build something worth having
New builds are what we do best at Carolina Decks, and this is exactly the kind of project that shows why. Patching a failing outdoor space can buy time, but it rarely gets homeowners where they actually want to go. For this family, the structure wasn’t worth saving. More importantly, they’d already spent years working around a backyard that didn’t work. The better question wasn’t “how do we fix this?” It was “what do you actually dream of being out here?”
What we built: two levels, done right
The answer turned out to be two distinct outdoor living zones built off the same structure, which is exactly what the house was always set up for but never delivered.
Up top: a new upper deck with TimberTech composite decking in Dark Roast and black Trex aluminum railing. The new deck features clean lines, stays low maintenance, and is built to hold up through Charlotte’s humid summers without the annual staining and sealing routine that wore out the old wood.
Below: the under-deck space became a proper covered patio: exposed timber framing, a rainproof ceiling system running between the joists, and a finished concrete floor that gives the lower level its own identity. When it rains, the upper deck drains away from the space below. Both levels stay usable.


The result
Two outdoor spaces where there was effectively zero before. The upper deck handles entertaining from morning coffee to evening grilling, the kind of space you actually point people toward when they come over. The covered patio below is its own space: shaded, dry, a place to sit even when the weather doesn’t cooperate.
Charlotte summers being what they are, that matters more than most people expect until they have it.
Project details:
Decking: TimberTech composite
Railing: Trex black aluminum
Levels: Upper deck + covered lower patio
Lower patio: Exposed timber framing, rainproof ceiling system between joists, concrete floor
Columns: Natural wood
Multi-level solution: Two complete outdoor living spaces from one structure
Custom builds are what Carolina Decks is built for. If your outdoor space has reached the point where you know something needs to change, that’s the conversation we love to have. Book a free estimate or call us at (980) 414-0320 and let’s talk about what’s possible.




