Finished arborvitae privacy row planted along a new wood fence in Lexington's Lansdowne neighborhood

Completed Project

Arborvitae Privacy Row in Lexington, KY

A residential arborvitae privacy-wall planting in Lexington's Lansdowne neighborhood, installed behind a newly built fence by Orlando's Landscaping to create year-round backyard screening.

PROJECT DETAILS

Scope and planning notes

Project overview

This Lansdowne residential project paired a new wood fence built by Orlando's Landscaping with an arborvitae privacy row installed by Big Tree Planting Co.

Privacy-wall goal

The client wanted evergreen screening that would soften the fence line, add height, and create a more private backyard view through every season.

Fence and backyard coordination

The planting had to work with the finished fence, available yard space, neighboring views, overhead lines, and the curve of the backyard planting bed.

Spacing and mulch

The arborvitae were set in a clean row with practical spacing for a privacy screen, then finished with dark mulch to protect the planting bed and give the fence line a finished look.

Watering and aftercare

Evergreen privacy rows need consistent watering after planting, especially during establishment. The project photos show the row being watered after installation.

PROJECT PHOTOS

Current photos from the job

These photos show the active installation work. Final finished photos can be added after the last cleanup and completion shots are ready.

PROOF CONTEXT

What this project can and cannot prove

  • Privacy-row proof should show the planting line, fence or property context, spacing, mulch finish, and watering after installation.
  • A project like this helps users judge whether their own yard has enough depth, access, sun, and aftercare capacity for evergreens.
  • Claims should stay tied to visible project details rather than promising instant full privacy before the trees mature.

NEXT STEP

Ready to plan the planting?

Tell us what you want planted, where the property is, and whether the job is local or a larger regional project.