
The local fence company for the wooded hillside homes around the historic Jenkins Estate — cedar privacy, wood fencing, sloped-lot installs, and fence replacement built for southwest Beaverton's established lots.
Jenkins Estate at 8005 SW Grabhorn Road is one of southwest Beaverton's most distinctive landmarks — a 68-acre, early-1900s English hunting-lodge estate and gardens, listed on the National Register of Historic Places and cared for today by the Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District. The wooded hillside that climbs around it forms the Sexton Mountain area in the 97007 ZIP, and the homes tucked into those slopes are some of the most established residential properties in this corner of Beaverton. When homeowners here ask who installs fences near Jenkins Estate, the answer is Beaverton Fence Pro — the local crew that works the streets off Grabhorn Road and Sexton Mountain Drive every week.
To be clear, we serve the homes and businesses near the historic estate, not the THPRD grounds themselves. Single-family houses on the hillside, larger wooded lots, and the acreage-style properties that back up to the tree line all need fencing built for the Pacific Northwest and for terrain that rarely sits flat. We bring naturally rot-resistant cedar, classic wood privacy fencing, and durable on-grade post setting to your property, set everything to last in our wet climate, and keep the job inside Beaverton's fence code. Call (855) 598-3288 any time — we answer 24/7.
The homes around Jenkins Estate sit in a mature, tree-shaded setting, and the look most owners want is fencing that belongs in it — warm wood tones that read naturally against firs and big-leaf maples rather than stark white panels. For an established, historic-adjacent neighborhood like this one, cedar and wood privacy fencing are simply the right materials, and they are what we install most on these streets.
A 6-foot cedar privacy fence is the go-to near the estate — full-height screening that suits a tree-lined lot, weathers to a soft silver, and resists rot through the wettest Sexton Mountain winters.
From good-neighbor and board-on-board to lattice-topped runs, wood fencing matches the older, character-rich homes on the hillside without looking out of place.
Every post near Jenkins Estate goes in a concrete footing with proper drainage, because the saturated, clay-heavy hillside ground here is what fails shallow-set fences first.
Whether you want full backyard privacy or a clean run along a wooded property line, cedar privacy fence installation and wood fence installation are the two builds we handle most around the Jenkins Estate area.

From cedar privacy on a sloped lot to replacing a tired old fence, here is what we install and repair for properties in the Sexton Mountain area.
Aging and storm-damaged fences torn out and rebuilt across the Jenkins Estate area.

Almost nothing around Sexton Mountain sits dead level. The streets near Jenkins Estate roll across a wooded hillside, so the real skill out here is fencing that follows grade cleanly — without leaving awkward gaps under the rails or panels that fight the slope. That is exactly the work we specialize in.
Can you build a fence on a steep Sexton Mountain lot? Yes — stepped and racked fencing on graded ground is a core part of what we do near Jenkins Estate, and we walk the line with you first so you know exactly how it will sit before we set a single post.
Should you replace an old fence or just repair it? Around Jenkins Estate, where many lots have carried the same fence for fifteen or twenty years, that is the most common question we hear. The honest answer depends on the bones. If the posts are still sound and only a few rails or pickets have failed, a targeted repair is the smart, economical move. But once the posts themselves are rotting at the soil line, the line has begun to lean section by section, or you find yourself patching the same fence every spring, you are spending good money to prop up something that is past its service life — and full fence replacement will cost less over the next decade than another round of patches. We walk the whole run, push on the posts, and tell you straight which way the math points.
The wooded setting that makes this area beautiful is also hard on fences. Big firs and maples shed limbs in winter windstorms, root systems heave the ground, and the deep shade keeps wood damp long after open lots have dried out. When a tree limb crushes a section or a gust topples a tired run, we respond fast because we are a local crew, not a dispatch from across the metro. We clear the damage, assess what is salvageable, and rebuild your boundary sound again — whether that means a few new panels or a complete tear-out and rebuild. On a replacement, we also take the chance to correct what failed the first time: posts reset deeper, footings given real drainage, and the line stepped or racked properly to the slope so the new fence does not repeat the old one's lean.
Which streets near Jenkins Estate do we serve? The short answer is all of the hillside in this part of 97007. Our work centers on the residential streets nearest the estate: the homes along SW Grabhorn Road right at the estate entrance, the established subdivisions off SW Sexton Mountain Drive, the blocks near SW 155th Avenue, and the lots along SW Kemmer Road as it climbs the hill. From there we reach across the rest of the Sexton Mountain neighborhood and out toward the open space at the western edge of the area. Because we know these specific streets, we already know where the grades get steep, where the ground stays wet, and where setbacks and slopes call for extra planning — which means fewer surprises on estimate day and a fence line that is laid out right the first time.
This corner of Beaverton sits at the meeting point of the city's most wooded, hill-climbing terrain, so the surrounding pages are worth a look when you are deciding what fits your lot. Our broader area page for fencing in Sexton Mountain covers the whole neighborhood, and the city-wide overview of fencing in Beaverton lays out what works best by area. You can browse every neighborhood we serve from the Beaverton service areas directory, or look at the sibling area along the western tree line near fencing near Cooper Mountain Nature Park.
Anyone can quote a fence. What separates a fence that lasts a decade from one that leans in two winters is whether the installer understands this specific hillside. The ground around Jenkins Estate is clay-heavy, water-retaining, and rarely flat — the kind of terrain that punishes shortcuts like posts set too shallow, footings without drainage, or untreated lumber pressed against wet earth. We build for that reality on every job near the estate, stepping or racking the line to the grade and footing each post to hold through saturated winters. When you are ready to move from research to a real estimate, the next step is the transactional page for fence installation near Jenkins Estate, or simply call (855) 598-3288. We will walk your property, talk through code, slope, and materials, and give you a clear, no-pressure estimate.
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Fence Installation Near Jenkins Estate Beaverton FencingLocal crew, hillside- and code-aware builds, free on-site estimates. We answer 24/7.
(855) 598-3288