Prepared for Heather & Cory Boyer · about a 2-minute review
Following up on the recap I sent 6/15/26 — I know it was a lot to take in, so I pulled the key decisions into this quick tap-through. No need to write back a long reply: just tap your reaction to each point below, add a note if you like, and hit send. It all comes straight to me. (Everything here matches that recap — this is just the easy-response version.)
I’m designing around these. The notes and recommendations below are worth weighing now rather than becoming an expensive surprise or afterthought later.
My recommendations — tap how you’d like to respond to each:
If you’re thinking about burying the overhead power lines, now’s a good moment to explore the cost and process — it’s far easier to fold in before the rest of the work begins.
You’re leaning toward the right side of the existing pavers. I’d encourage you to consider a full-length pergola across the entire back brow of the house (cost will be a factor). It keeps the yard balanced — otherwise the stretch in front of the AC unit and along the left sits bare and unused — gives that cohesive “wow” look when you glance back from inside, makes the most of pavers you’re already investing in, and future-proofs for a built-in BBQ later. This is the one I’d really hate to see scaled back — it shapes everything else.
Before we lock the pergola location, the existing brow over the office window will likely conflict with how the pergola attaches. We’ll want to assess whether it can stay or should come off for a clean look (and what that costs). Better to catch this early — it affects the pergola’s design and placement.
The cozy seating and retractable TV (65–70-inch) currently sit just right of the back door, close to the gate and main entrance. Two flags: (1) foot traffic — that’s the main way everyone comes and goes, so during a party or a game guests pass right through your relaxing spot; and (2) future access — if it’s finished and you later add the BBQ/kitchen, crews would move materials through that same entrance. A full-length pergola gives the flexibility to tuck it somewhere more protected.
Happy to pave the hammock zone for the dining table and chairs as you decided — the hammock stays. One note for the record: another block of pavers there can make the yard feel heavy, especially on the right. An alternative is moving the dining table and chairs to the open paved area where the outdoor kitchen was suggested in the preliminary design — it puts an otherwise-empty spot to use and keeps better balance. Either way I’ll make it beautiful; just wanted you to have the full picture.
Holding the built-in kitchen for a later phase is completely reasonable — just the construction trade-off: ideally the pergola and kitchen are built at the same time with one contractor. If you split them, I’d do the kitchen first, then the pergola — both need concrete footers, and building the kitchen after the pavers and pergola are in often means pulling up pavers and hauling equipment through a finished space.
On my end
On your end, when you have a chance