
The local fence company for the homes and businesses in the Cedar Hills neighborhoods around the Nike World Headquarters campus — cedar privacy, vinyl, chain-link, and commercial fencing built for the area.
The Nike World Headquarters campus on One Bowerman Drive — the roughly 400-acre Philip H. Knight Campus — is one of the most recognizable landmarks in the Cedar Hills area of Beaverton, and the residential neighborhoods and small businesses that ring it sit squarely in the 97005 ZIP. When homeowners and business owners in this part of Cedar Hills ask who installs fences near Nike World Headquarters, the answer is Beaverton Fence Pro — the local crew that works the streets off Murray Boulevard and Walker Road every week.
To be clear, we serve the homes and businesses in the Cedar Hills neighborhoods near the campus, not the secured Nike campus itself, and we have no affiliation with or endorsement from Nike. Single-family houses on the residential streets, condos and apartments nearby, and the retail storefronts and office suites along Murray Boulevard and Walker Road all need fencing built for the Pacific Northwest. We bring cedar privacy fencing, low-maintenance vinyl, chain-link, and commercial-grade options to your property, set them 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.
We use the campus only as a landmark because everyone in this corner of Beaverton orients off it. When a customer near SW Jay Street or SW Hocken Avenue says they are "just behind the Knight Campus" or "off Bowerman past the 217 interchange," we know the exact streets, the lot sizes, and the kind of ground we will be digging into. That familiarity is the whole point of hiring a crew that already works the 97005 ZIP every week. We are not booking your job from a call center three suburbs away and guessing at your conditions; we have set posts on these blocks, pulled old chain-link off these property lines, and rebuilt fences that the last big windstorm knocked flat. The closer a fence company is to your street, the faster it answers, the better it knows your soil, and the more accurately it can quote a job the first time it looks at your yard.
The Cedar Hills homes near the Nike campus range from mid-century ranch houses to updated suburban lots, and the most popular request here is a backyard that feels private despite the steady commuter traffic on Murray Boulevard and Walker Road. That is where a solid privacy fence earns its keep.
Frontages tell a different story than backyards on these streets. Many of the corner lots and visible road frontages off Walker Road look better with an open, decorative line than a tall wall of boards, so aluminum and ornamental fencing is a frequent request for front yards and side runs that face the street. It defines the property and keeps pets in without boxing the house in, and powder-coated aluminum shrugs off the constant Cedar Hills damp without rusting the way old steel did. On lots where a frontage borders a busy stretch, we often pair an ornamental front section with a cedar or vinyl privacy run in back, so each part of the yard gets the right material for how it is actually used.
A 6-foot cedar privacy fence is the go-to for homes near the campus — full-height screening that blocks sightlines from nearby roads and parking while standing up to wet winters.
Vinyl fencing suits the suburban streets off Murray Boulevard for owners who want a clean look with no staining or sealing season after season.
Every post near the Nike campus goes in a concrete footing with proper drainage, because the saturated ground here is what fails shallow-set fences first.
Whether you want full backyard privacy or a tidy side-yard run, cedar privacy fence installation and vinyl fence installation are the two materials we install most for homes near the Nike World Headquarters campus.

From backyard cedar to storefront security fencing, here is what we install and repair for properties in the Cedar Hills neighborhoods around the campus.
Perimeter fence, gates, and dumpster enclosures for offices and retail near the campus.
Storm, wind, and wet-ground damage repaired fast across the Cedar Hills area.

The corridor around the Nike campus draws steady daytime activity, and the businesses near it — offices, pad sites, and retail along Murray Boulevard and Walker Road — have their own fencing needs. We handle commercial work as readily as residential.
The flip side of being near a major employer is parking and access pressure: lots fill during the day, delivery trucks need clear lanes, and tenants want a clean perimeter that holds up to constant use. We size gates for the vehicles that actually use them, set commercial-grade posts that take daily wear without sagging, and build enclosures that keep dumpsters and equipment out of sight without becoming a maintenance headache. For galvanized chain-link on a back yard or a powder-coated ornamental line out front, the footings go deep into our wet ground the same way they do on a house, because saturated Cedar Hills soil does not care whether the property is residential or commercial.
Do you install commercial fencing for businesses near Nike HQ? Yes — commercial & security fencing is one of our core services, and we coordinate around business hours so the work does not disrupt your operation.
How quickly can you repair a fence near Murray Blvd? Quickly — because we are a local crew, not a dispatch from across the metro. The Pacific Northwest delivers the two things that break fences most: long stretches of saturated ground that loosen shallow posts, and winter windstorms that push on panels and topple sections that were never set deep enough. The Cedar Hills homes near the Nike campus see both. When a section leans after a storm or a gate stops latching, we come out, assess whether a repair or a replacement run makes more sense, and get your boundary sound again. For leaning posts, broken rails, sagging gates, and wind-blown panels, fence repair is a same-area call away.
Most repair calls near the campus trace back to one root cause: a post that was never set right for this ground. When a panel leans within a couple of winters, the problem usually is not the boards but the footing under them, so we dig down to find out whether the original post was set in concrete with drainage or simply tamped into wet clay. If a single post failed, we reset it deep and let the rest of the fence stand. If we pull one out and find rot creeping up several more, we tell you straight that a replacement run will cost less over five years than chasing one repair after another. After a hard storm we triage by what is unsafe first — a section blown into a driveway or a gate that will not secure a yard with a dog or kids — then come back for the cosmetic fixes once the boundary is sound again.
Which neighborhoods near the Nike campus do we serve? The short answer is all of them in this corner of 97005. Our work centers on the residential and commercial streets around the campus: the homes off SW Murray Boulevard and SW Walker Road, the blocks along SW Jay Street, and the streets near SW Hocken Avenue and SW Jenkins Road. From there we reach across the rest of Cedar Hills, including the corridor that runs toward Cedar Hills Crossing. With Highway 26 and Highway 217 both close at hand, getting to any property in this area is fast.
Because Cedar Hills is one of Beaverton's older, more established neighborhoods, many lots here have aging fences that are due for replacement rather than another patch. We can match an existing style so a new run blends with what is already there, or modernize a tired wood fence into clean vinyl or cedar. If you are weighing your options, our broader pages for fencing in Cedar Hills and the city-wide overview of fencing in Beaverton lay out what works best by area. You can also browse every neighborhood we serve from the Beaverton service areas directory, or look at the sibling landmark area for fencing near Cedar Hills Crossing just down the corridor.
Knowing the streets also means knowing how they were platted. The blocks closest to SW Jenkins Road and SW Hocken Avenue tend to sit on tighter lots where the fence line runs right up against a neighbor's, so a good-neighbor build that finishes cleanly on both sides matters and we set those panels to share the boundary fairly. Further out toward Murray Boulevard and the Walker Road corridor, lots open up and back fences often run long, which changes how we space posts and brace gates against wind. Driveway approaches off these busier streets frequently need a wider gate than a standard yard, and corner properties have setback rules that dictate how close to the sidewalk a fence can stand. We sort all of that out on the walk-through before a single post hole is dug, so there are no surprises once the crew is on site.
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 ground. Cedar Hills sits on the kind of clay-heavy, water-retaining soil that punishes shortcuts — posts set too shallow, footings without drainage, untreated lumber against wet earth. We build for that reality on every job in the neighborhoods near the Nike campus, which is why our fences hold their line through the wettest Beaverton winters.
The material choices follow from the same logic. We favor rot-resistant western red cedar for privacy runs because it handles the constant moisture far better than cheaper softwoods, and we keep the bottom rail off the wet ground rather than letting boards wick water up from the dirt. Posts go in concrete with a gravel base so water drains away from the wood instead of pooling around it. On vinyl and aluminum jobs the lumber question disappears, but the footing rules do not — the failure point in this soil is almost always what is underground, not what you see above it. Doing it this way costs a little more up front and saves you a replacement years sooner than the bargain crews will admit. When you are ready to move from research to a real estimate, the next step is the transactional page for fence installation near Nike World Headquarters, or simply call (855) 598-3288. We will walk your property, talk through code and materials, and give you a clear, no-pressure estimate.
An estimate near the campus starts with a walk, not a guess over the phone. We measure the actual run, check where the property line falls, and look at how the ground sits — whether a slope sends runoff toward the fence line, where utilities or irrigation might cross the dig, and how a gate will swing against a driveway or a neighbor's setback. We talk through what you want the fence to do: full backyard privacy off a busy stretch of Murray Boulevard, a low ornamental line that keeps the dog in without hiding the house, or a commercial perimeter that takes daily traffic. Then we put materials and heights against Beaverton's fence code and, where it applies, your neighborhood association's rules, so the number we give you is for a fence you can actually build, not a figure that changes once a permit or a committee gets involved.
From there the plan is straightforward. We confirm the layout with you, mark the line, set posts in concrete with proper drainage for our wet soil, and hang panels or rails once the footings have cured. For most residential runs near the Nike campus the work wraps in a day or two once we are on site; longer commercial perimeters and gate systems take a little more. You are dealing with the same local crew from the first walk-through to the final gate latch — no handoff to a subcontractor you never met. When you want that walk-through scheduled, call (855) 598-3288 and we will set a time that works around your day.
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Fence Installation Near Nike World Headquarters Beaverton FencingLocal crew, code- and HOA-aware builds, free on-site estimates for the Cedar Hills neighborhoods around the campus. We answer 24/7.
(855) 598-3288