
New fences, repairs, and commercial fencing for the homes and businesses near the H.M. Terpenning (HMT) Recreation Complex — durable chain-link, cedar privacy, vinyl, and security fencing built for Beaverton's busy Five Oaks corridor. Call for a free on-site estimate.
Wondering who installs fences near the HMT Recreation Complex? Beaverton Fence Pro is the local crew that builds and repairs fences for the homes and businesses around the H.M. Terpenning Recreation Complex at 15707 SW Walker Road, off SW 158th Avenue in the Five Oaks area. We install chain-link, cedar privacy fence, vinyl, aluminum, and commercial security fencing across the 97006 streets that surround the sports campus, and we answer the phone 24/7. To get started, call (855) 598-3288 for a free on-site estimate.
The HMT Recreation Complex is a 92-acre Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District campus packed with ball fields, soccer and lacrosse pitches, an athletic center, an aquatic center, a tennis center, and a skate park. That activity draws steady foot traffic, parking, and weekend crowds to this corner of Beaverton — and the homes and small commercial properties nearby feel it. We serve those surrounding properties: the single-family subdivisions, townhomes, and multifamily buildings near 158th and Walker, plus the small businesses along Walker Road. We fence the neighboring lots, not the recreation complex itself, and our local knowledge of these blocks gets the job done right the first time.
Our work centers on the residential and commercial blocks ringing the sports campus: the homes off SW 158th Avenue and SW Walker Road, the streets near SW Jenkins Road, and the pockets along SW Millikan Way. These Five Oaks lots run the full mix — older subdivisions with mature trees, newer townhome rows on tighter footprints, and apartment communities that sit close to the busy arterials feeding the complex. That variety shapes every job. We confirm the boundary first, check the vision-clearance triangle Beaverton enforces on corner lots near intersections like 158th and Walker, and coordinate with neighbors when a fence sits on a shared line.
Proximity to a high-activity rec complex changes what a fence has to do here. Stray balls clear field fences, parking and event traffic push right up against backyards, and kids and pets need a reliable barrier between the yard and roads that stay busy on game days. A solid full-height fence earns its keep on these streets. We build the nearby properties — single-family homes, townhomes, apartments, and the small storefronts and offices along Walker Road — not the THPRD grounds. With Highway 26 and the broader Sunset corridor minutes away, our trucks stay close and our response times stay short whether you need a full new fence line or a quick repair before the next windstorm.
Matched to the busy-corridor backyards and kid- and pet-heavy lots around the HMT Recreation Complex — chosen for durability and Pacific Northwest weather before they're chosen for looks.
The most durable choice for homes near a busy rec complex — galvanized chain-link shrugs off stray balls, foot traffic, and weather, and it keeps kids and pets safely contained near 158th and Walker. See chain-link fence installation.
A 6-foot good-neighbor cedar fence is the go-to for full screening from event parking and field noise, with rot-resistant heartwood set off the wet soil line. See cedar privacy fence installation.
Low-maintenance vinyl suits the newer townhomes and updated lots near the complex — no staining or sealing, season after wet season. Explore vinyl fence installation.
Heavier-gauge perimeter fence, enclosures, and security runs for the storefronts and offices along Walker Road. See commercial & security fencing.
The retail pads, offices, and service businesses fronting Walker Road near the HMT Recreation Complex take more abuse than a quiet residential line — and we handle commercial work as readily as residential. We build robust chain-link perimeter and security fence, dumpster and equipment enclosures that satisfy both landlord and hauler, and swing or rolling gates wide enough to clear a loading area. Heavier-gauge posts go in deeper concrete footings on the spans that take constant gate use and traffic-facing frontage, and we phase the job so a business stays open while the crew is on site. Ask about commercial & security fencing and gate installation.
From first call to finished fence near the HMT Recreation Complex — straightforward, with no pressure.
A fence near a high-activity sports campus has to take more punishment than a fence on a quiet cul-de-sac, and that shapes how we build. Properties along the busy frontage near SW 158th Avenue and SW Walker Road get traffic-facing runs that see constant motion, the occasional stray ball, and event-day parking pressed against the line, so we spec heavier materials and tighter post spacing where it counts. Galvanized chain-link is the workhorse for containment and durability here, while solid cedar or vinyl handles the lots that want privacy and noise screening from the crowds the complex pulls in.
Five Oaks sits on the same clay-heavy, water-retaining ground that runs through much of Beaverton, so post setting is where a fence is won or lost. Every post near the HMT Recreation Complex goes into a concrete footing with drainage at the base — typically a third of the post's length below grade for a 6-foot fence. Saturated soil loosens shallow-set posts first, and that's the failure point we engineer out on day one. Untreated lumber that touches wet earth wicks moisture upward and rots from the bottom, so cedar gets rot-resistant heartwood at the base and a gap above the soil line. On the gentle grade that runs through parts of these subdivisions we step or rack panels to follow the slope cleanly. None of this shows in a glossy brochure, but it's exactly the judgment a national crew passing through for a season doesn't carry.
We handle damaged chain-link and privacy fences as well as full replacements, and because we're a local crew — not a dispatch from across the metro — we get to leaning posts, bent chain-link, broken rails, sagging gates, and wind-blown panels fast. Two failures account for most damage near the complex: long stretches of saturated ground that loosen shallow footings, and the steady contact a fence takes along high-traffic frontage. When a section tips after heavy rain, the post footing usually gave way rather than the panel breaking, so we reset that post in a deeper footing and the line holds. When wind splits rails or an impact dents chain-link but the posts stay plumb, we swap the affected material and keep the original posts, which keeps the fence repair quick and the cost down.
Many lots near the HMT campus have aging fences that are past patching and due for a fresh run. We can match an existing style so a new fence blends with what's already there, or upgrade a tired chain-link or wood line into clean vinyl or cedar privacy. If you're weighing your options, the broader overview of fencing in Five Oaks and the city-wide page for fencing in Beaverton lay out what works best by area, and you can see every option on the fencing services page.
Quickly. Call (855) 598-3288 and we'll schedule an on-site visit at your convenience, often within a day or two for properties near the HMT Recreation Complex. Staying close to this pocket of 97006 means we already know which blocks have tight side-yard access, where overhead utility lines limit a tall section, and how the streets around 158th and Walker back up on event days — so we schedule digging and deliveries to dodge the crunch. A crew already working one Five Oaks job can often swing by a neighbor's property the same day rather than booking you a week out. You get a clear, written estimate with no obligation and no pressure.
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HMT Recreation Complex Fencing in BeavertonLocal crew, code- and HOA-aware builds, free on-site estimates. We answer 24/7.
(855) 598-3288