
May 26, 2026
How Long Does It Take to Build a Deck in Pittsburgh?
Two days ago, we got a call from a homeowner in the Pittsburgh area. He wanted a covered deck - a real one, not some basic throw it together type - and he had one hard requirement: it needed to be finished by July 4th. Today is May 25th. When we walked him through the math, he pushed back. He said another contractor told him it could be done. We told him to hire that contractor.
That conversation happens more than you’d think. And it’s not the homeowner’s fault. Nobody tells you how longa custom outdoor living project actually takes - not start to finish, not with Pittsburgh’s permit offices and four-season climate factored in. You find out the hard way, or you find a contractor willing to tell you upfront.
This is the honest answer. No optimistic guesses. No ranges so wide they’re useless. Just the real timeline for building a quality deck in the Pittsburgh metro area, broken down by phase so you can plan accordingly.
The short version:
• Planning & Design: approximately 2 weeks(homeowner-controlled - this can stretch to months)
• Pre-Construction: approximately 4 weeks
• Build Phase: 4 to 6 weeks for a typical custom deck with a covered roof
Total from approved proposal to project completion: 8 to 10 weeks. Total from first call to sitting on your new deck: plan for 10 to 14 weeks in most cases.
Now here’s what those phases actually look like on the ground in Pittsburgh.

Phase 1: Planning and Design (Approximately 2 Weeks – Pro Tip: You Control This)
The planning and design phase begins the moment you reach out, whether that’s a phone call or a contact form. We respond the same day to learn more about the project. If it’s a good fit, we schedule a site visit within three to five days.
Site visits run one to two hours. That length is intentional. We’re not there to take measurements and disappear. The site visit is where we learn how a family actually uses their outdoor space and whether they entertain large groups or want something more private, perhaps there’s a grade change that affects stairs and access, or if an existing structure needs to come out first. The details that come out in that conversation are what make a proposal accurate and a design worth building. We’ve walked properties in Fox Chapel, Upper St. Clair, Peters Township, and throughout the North Hills where the site itself - the slope, the tree lines, the existing hardscape - changed the entire direction of the design before we ever put a line on paper.
From the site visit, we move into design and proposal development. Using AI-assisted rendering tools, we produce an initial 3D visual of the project within three to five days. If the design requires additional refinement or multiple concept options, we work with a third-party design firm, which adds roughly a week to that timeline. Once the design is right, we deliver a formal proposal with fixed pricing - no open-ended allowances that balloon later.
If you’re trying to understand why two proposals for the same project can look dramatically different in price, we covered that in detail in our post on why deck prices vary so much. The short version: they’re not the same project.
Here’s what most homeowners don’t realize: once we hand you a proposal, the clock is in your hands. Some clients approve within a few days. Others take several weeks or even months. High-ticket projects take time to decide, that’s normal. But if you have a target date in mind, the time you spend deliberating doesn’t move the calendar. It just compresses everything that comes after.
What Slows This Phase Down
The biggest delay in planning is almost always the homeowner working through budget and design decisions. Requests for alternate layouts, scope adjustments, and budget comparisons are common. We’d rather you get it right than move fast and regret a decision. But understand the trade-off: every week spent in design revision is a week that doesn’t exist on the build side of the calendar.
It’s also worth being honest about something else: some homeowners use the design phase to price-shop. They take our proposal which reflects hours of site visit time, design work, and detailed takeoffs and use it to negotiate with other contractors. We understand it. But if you’re genuinely trying to hit a target date, that approach costs you weeks you don’t have to spend.
Phase 2: Pre-Construction (Approximately 4 Weeks)
Once we have an approved proposal and a signed contract, the four-week pre-construction phase begins. This is the phase most homeowners underestimate and the one that surprises them most when timelines shift.
During pre-construction we’re pulling permits, finalizing construction prints, completing the material takeoff, scheduling subcontractors, and getting you into our showroom to make final material selections. Approximately 75 percent of our clients come in person to choose their decking, trim, railing, ceiling, and lighting systems. The others work from samples, research online, or visit a local supply house. Either way, selections need to be locked in before we can order materials and confirm the crew schedule.
Permitting in Pittsburgh: What You Actually Need to Know
This is where Pittsburgh diverges most from the generic national answers you’ll find online. Allegheny County and the surrounding townships operate independently - there’s no unified permitting system, no consistent review timeline, and no guarantee that what worked in one municipality will work the same way in the next one over.
Most of the townships we work in regularly return permits within two to three weeks. We’ve recently had a very smooth experience in Collier Township, including a complex project involving a garage, bathroom addition, and covered patio where our permit package was accepted on the first submission. When a package is professionally prepared and complete, most offices move efficiently.
Other municipalities are more thorough. Mt. Lebanon reviews permit packages with a fine-toothed comb. That’s not a criticism - rigorous review protects homeowners and ensures structural standards are met - but it does mean your timeline needs to account for back-and-forth. The single most important factor in a smooth permit process is the quality of the submission package itself. We do significant legwork before submitting: accurate drawings, complete structural specifications, clear answers to questions the reviewer is likely to ask. A well-prepared package gets approved faster than an incomplete one every time.
When Permits Go Wrong: A Real Example from Scott Township
We had a project in Scott Township that became one of the most difficult permit situations we’ve encountered. The design called for helical piles, a screw-in steel footing system that performs exceptionally well in Pittsburgh’s variable soil conditions and on sloped lots where traditional concrete piers are harder to place. Helical piles carry manufacturer engineering certification through suppliers like Mascore, and they’re code-compliant. But they’re still relatively new to this market, and not every permit reviewer has encountered them.
The permit office in Scott Township was led by a structural engineer who required independent engineered drawings beyond Mascore’s documentation, despite the fact that the piles themselves are pre-engineered products with load ratings specified by the manufacturer. To satisfy the requirement, we had to locate an engineer with specific helical pile experience, not just a general structural engineer, because the calculations involved are product-specific. That engineer pool in Western PA is small. We found someone, but we were on their schedule, not ours.
By the time we had what the township needed, months had passed. The homeowner had lost patience and excitement. The project was cancelled. That’s a real outcome - not a hypothetic alone - and it’s the clearest illustration we have of why Pittsburgh’s permitting environment requires genuine local knowledge, not just a standard permit application workflow.
Helical piles are still the right solution in many situations, we haven’t stopped using them. But on projects where the permit municipality is unfamiliar with the product, we now have that conversation with homeowners upfront and build extra buffer into the pre-construction timeline. That’s the trade-off: the better technical solution sometimes carries more permitting risk than a conventional footing in a market that’s still catching up to it.
When Engineering Gets Involved
Western Pennsylvania’s topography doesn’t trigger engineering requirements for most standard deck projects. Where we see it more often is with retaining walls designed to holdback hillsides, or when a design calls for spanning greater distances between posts to preserve sightlines to the river, to the city skyline, or across a ravine. Those longer spans sometimes require a structural engineering review. When they do, add one to two weeks to the pre-construction timeline.
Material Lead Times in 2026
Standard materials like decking boards, framing lumber, handrails have stabilized since the post-COVID supply disruptions. We’re not experiencing the delays we saw in 2021 and 2022. The major manufacturers have expanded capacity; Deckorators is finishing a new manufacturing plant in Buffalo specifically to serve demand in our region, and the recent acquisition of MoistureShield is part of the same capacity expansion story.
Where lead times still matter is in custom and specialty items, typically anything involving steel or custom metalwork. Spiral stairs, custom privacy screens, and specialty structural beams can add two to four weeks to your material timeline. If your design includes any of these, we identify them at proposal stage and order immediately after contract signing.

Phase 3: The Build (4 to 6 Weeks for a Typical SelectDecks Project)
Our most common project is a custom deck with a covered outdoor roof structure — a full outdoor living space, not just a platform. Here’s what the build schedule looks like for that scope:
• Week 1: Demo of any existing structure, site cleanup, layout, and post footings
• Week 2: Deck framing and roof dried in - shingle sinstalled so the structure is weather-protected
• Week 3: Deckorators decking boards installed, handrails set
• Week 4: Synergy ceiling system installed, PlyGem trim work begins
• Week 5: Trim completed, TruScapes lighting fixtures installed and wired
• Week 6: Punch out, final inspections, site cleanup, and final walkthrough with homeowner
Projects with additional scope such as outdoor kitchens, fireplaces, multi-level structures, screened enclosures add time proportional to the complexity. There’s no padding in that schedule. Each phase has to be done correctly before the next one starts, and inspections happen at the points where the township requires sign-off before we proceed.
One thing worth understanding about build timelines across the industry: a contractor who promises a significantly faster schedule isn’t necessarily lying. They may be planning to run your project alongside two or three others simultaneously, moving crews between sites as they wait on inspections or deliveries. That approach can compress a calendar but it introduces coordination risk which is that your project sits idle while the crew is elsewhere, and quality control gets harder when attention is divided. We manage our schedule to keep momentum on each project rather than spreading thin across many.
Pittsburgh Weather Is a Real Factor - Not a Disclaimer
We finished three projects in a single week in late May 2026. All three had started at various points during the winter and beginning in October 2025. The winter of 2025-26 was brutal. We progressed where conditions allowed, but stringing together multiple productive days on site was genuinely difficult. Frozen ground delays footing work. Certain adhesives and sealants have minimum temperature requirements that aren’t suggestions, they’re chemistry. Installing a Synergy ceiling system in sub-freezing temperatures isn’t a good idea regardless of schedule pressure. We’ve seen the results when it’s forced, and they don’t hold up. So we wait for the right conditions and keep moving on what we can.
One of those three winter projects required a specific siding product. The manufacturer doesn’t produce that line during winter months because demand isn’t high enough to justify a production run. We couldn’t get it until spring. That’s not a planning failure; it’s a reality of building in a four-season market that some product lines simply reflect. We kept the homeowner informed throughout and delivered the finished project as soon as conditions and materials allowed.
This spring has brought its own challenges - rain has been persistent, and outdoor construction doesn’t happen in the rain. When weather intervenes, we move to the next project, communicate clearly, and get back on site as soon as conditions allow. If your project starts in September, factor in the possibility of a winter interruption. If it starts in March, the freeze-thaw cycle makes footing work unreliable until the ground stabilizes. These aren’t excuses. They’re the honest reality of building in Western Pennsylvania. We go deeper on seasonal planning in our Pittsburgh winter deck guide if you want the full picture.
Why the Wait Is a Good Sign and Not a Red Flag
Here’s something most contractors won’t tell you: if a builder can start your project next week, that’s worth a hard look. Not because being busy makes a contractor better, but because in this market, the builders who are doing excellent work at a professional level are almost never sitting around waiting for a call.
Think about it from both sides. If you compare two contractors and one can start immediately while the other has a four to six week wait, there’s a reason for both. The contractor with await list has more work than capacity which means homeowners are choosing them over the alternatives, repeatedly, enough to create a backlog. That’s the market telling you something. The contractor who’s available right now may be great. But the question is worth asking: why aren’t they booked?
A wait list also tells you something about how a contractor runs their business. A builder who is honest about their timeline from the very first conversation well before you’ve signed anything, before there’s any money on the table, is showing you exactly how they operate. They’re not telling you what you want to hear to get the job. They’re telling you what’s true so you can plan accordingly. That kind of transparency at the front end of a relationship is a reliable preview of how they’ll communicate when your project hits a permit delay or a weather interruption.
The contractor who tells you what you want to hear to win the job is also the contractor who will tell you what you want to hear when something goes wrong on site. And something always goes wrong on site.
The goal isn’t to find a builder who can start tomorrow. It’s to find a builder who is worth the wait, and then start planning early enough that the wait doesn’t cost you the summer.

What This Means for Your Planning
Reverse-engineer your target date. If you want to be on your new deck by Labor Day, count back 10 to 14weeks. That puts your first call in late May or early June, at the latest. If you want July 4th, you needed to call in March. If you’re reading this in late May hoping for July 4th, the math doesn’t work - regardless of what anyone tells you.
The complete timeline at a glance:
• First call to site visit: 3 to 5 days
• Site visit to proposal: 3 to 5 days (add 1 week for complex design iterations)
• Proposal approval: Homeowner-controlled - days to months
• Pre-construction: Approximately 4 weeks(permitting, prints, materials, scheduling)
• Build phase: 4 to 6 weeks for a custom deck with covered roof
Total from approved proposal to completion: 8 to 10 weeks. Total from first call to finished project: 10 to14 weeks under normal conditions.
Ready to Start Planning?
The best time to start is before you think you need to. By the time most homeowners call, they’re already behind the timeline they had in mind. If you’re thinking about a custom deck or covered outdoor living space in Pittsburgh this year, start the conversation now.
Visit our Pittsburgh outdoor living page to learn more about what we build and how we work, or schedule a discovery call and we’ll walk through the timeline specific to your project, your site, and your target date. No surprises. No missed summers.
Check Out Our Other Blogs

March 30, 2026
Why Deck Prices Vary So Much and Getting 3 Estimates is a Bad Idea
You did everything right. You called three contractors, got three proposals, and now you’re staring at quotes that are $20,000 to $40,000 apart for what looks like the same project. Same size. Same composite decking. Roughly the same drawings.
So why is one contractor $40,000 cheaper than another?
The short answer: those proposals are not for the same project. They may look identical on paper, but what’s actually being built - the materials specified, the construction standards applied, the details included - can be dramatically different. Understanding those differences is the most important thing you can do before signing a contract.
But here’s the thing most homeowners don’t realize: the way you’re approaching this process may actually be making the confusion worse. And it starts with a piece of advice that’s been passed down for generations.

The “Get Three Bids” Rule Is Outdated
Somewhere along the way, a parent or neighbor told you to always get three estimates before hiring a contractor. It’s advice that made sense when it was coined - in an era when contractors largely built the same way, used similar materials, and offered roughly the same level of service. Comparing three proposals back then was a reasonable apples-to-apples exercise.
That world no longer exists.
Today’s outdoor living market spans an enormous range of quality, process, and expertise. When you collect three proposals from three fundamentally different types of contractors and then try to compare them by price, you’re not simplifying your decision - you’re manufacturing confusion.
The lowest bid isn’t a bargain. It’s usually a signal. Low proposals frequently leave out detailed preconstruction planning, realistic allowances for real-world conditions, dedicated project management, quality trade partners, and the overhead required to run a professional operation. Those costs don’t disappear when they’re missing from a proposal. They show up later - in change orders, delays, quality problems, and difficult conversations after construction has already started.
The highest bid isn’t automatically overpriced either. It often reflects what a project actually costs when done correctly - preconstruction planning, accurate budgeting, experienced trade partners, and someone accountable for managing the job daily from start to finish. These aren’t luxuries. They’re the things that protect your project when something unexpected happens, and something unexpected always happens.
What Smart Homeowners Do Instead
The best outdoor living projects don’t start with price shopping. They start with alignment. Smart homeowners choose a builder based on process, communication, experience, trust, and transparency - and then build the project together from there.
Instead of collecting three proposals and comparing the bottom line, ask every contractor you’re considering these questions:
• How do you plan projects before construction begins?
• How detailed is your scope of work?
• Who manages the job on a daily basis?
• How do you handle budget changes when they come up?
• How many projects are you running at the same time?
The answers to those questions will tell you far more about who you’re hiring than any number at the bottom of a proposal. A contractor who can answer them clearly, specifically, and confidently is operating a professional business. One who can’t is telling you something important.
What “Luxury” and “Premium” Actually Mean - and What They Don’t
Walk through any contractor’s website in the Pittsburgh area and you’ll see the same words repeated everywhere: custom, luxury, premium, high-end. The language is nearly universal. The actual standards behind it are not.
We build on luxury properties across the Pittsburgh region, and what we see consistently tells a different story than the marketing. Inferior materials on high-end homes. Corners cut on projects where the homeowner had every reason to expect better. The gap between what a contractor calls their work and what they actually deliver can be significant - and it’s rarely obvious until the project is underway or already complete.
A contractor can call themselves a luxury builder while specifying entry-level composite decking, thin vinyl trim, plastic ceiling finishes, and hardware-store lighting fixtures. Nothing about that combination is dishonest in a legal sense - but it’s a long way from what most homeowners picture when they hear the word luxury.
The words a contractor uses to describe themselves are not a reliable indicator of the materials they actually specify or the standards they actually hold. The only way to know what you’re getting is to look past the language and into the specifics. What products are they specifying? What manufacturers are they partnered with? What do their completed projects look like five years after installation, not five days?
Labels are marketing. Product specifications are reality. When you’re evaluating proposals, focus on the second one.

What Happens to Cheap Materials After a Few Pittsburgh Winters
Pittsburgh’s climate is genuinely demanding for outdoor structures. Four full seasons, heavy snow loads, freeze-thaw cycles through winter and spring, humid summers, and intense sun in July. Materials that look fine in milder climates don’t always hold up here, and the problems don’t always show up immediately.
Read Also: Pittsburgh Winter Deck Guide: Maintenance, Safety, and Planning Tips
Here’s what we see repeatedly when entry-level materials are used on outdoor living projects in this region:
Ceilings that sag. Vinyl and plastic ceiling finishes are common in lower-cost covered outdoor spaces. They’re inexpensive to install and look acceptable initially. Over time, especially with Pittsburgh’s humidity and temperature swings, they begin to sag and warp. Premium products like Synergy ceiling systems are engineered for outdoor exposure and hold their shape and appearance long-term.
Trim that moves. Thin aluminum and vinyl trim is cheap to buy and easy to install. It’s also thin enough that within a season or two it starts showing signs of movement - gaps opening up, edges lifting, visible rippling along runs. PVC trim products like PlyGem behave differently. Thicker, more stable, designed for exterior exposure. It’s a more expensive line item in a proposal. It’s also one you won’t be thinking about five years from now.
Handrails that fail. Vinyl handrail systems are everywhere because they’re inexpensive. They’re also prone to showing scuff marks and dirt easily, and they become brittle in cold temperatures. A hard impact on a vinyl rail in January can crack it. Premium railing systems are built to handle that kind of stress.
Lighting that rusts. Low voltage landscape and deck lighting is one of the most value-engineered categories in outdoor construction. Inexpensive fixtures use hardware that corrodes quickly, especially in wet conditions. Premium outdoor lighting systems like TruScapes use materials that are built for long-term outdoor exposure. The difference is visible within a few seasons.
The Differences You Can’t See in a Proposal
Materials are the most visible driver of price differences, but they’re not the only one.
Professional outdoor living companies operate differently than general contractors who occasionally build decks. The infrastructure required to design, permit, build, and warrant a $100,000 outdoor living project correctly - experienced crews, proper insurance, detailed project management, quality control throughout construction - costs money. That cost is reflected in pricing.
Lower proposals sometimes come from contractors who are underpricing the work, cutting corners on labor, or simply don’t have the experience to know what a project like yours actually requires. The risk with those proposals isn’t always obvious upfront. It tends to show up during construction, or after it’s complete.
A Rule Worth Following When You’re Making Trade-Offs
If you’re working within a budget and need to make decisions about where to invest and where to pull back, there’s one principle that holds up consistently: prioritize material quality over square footage.
A well-built 400 square foot outdoor space with premium materials will outperform a 600 square foot space built with entry-level products every time - in durability, in appearance over time, and in the day-to-day experience of actually using it. Bigger isn’t better if the materials aren’t built to last.
Four More Questions to Ask Before You Sign Anything
1. What specific products are you specifying? Get the manufacturer and product line for decking, trim, railing, lighting, and ceiling materials. Not categories - actual product names.
2. What are the warranty terms on each major material? Premium products carry meaningful warranties. Entry-level products often don’t. That gap tells you something important about what the manufacturer believes about their own product.
3. Who is actually doing the work? Some contractors sub out every trade. Others have experienced crews who have built hundreds of projects. The answer affects quality control and accountability.
4. What does your post-construction support look like? If something goes wrong six months after the project is complete, what happens? A contractor who stands behind their work will have a clear answer to this question.

The Bottom Line
Stop collecting bids and start evaluating builders. The price on a proposal only makes sense once you understand what’s behind it - the materials, the process, the people, and the standards being applied to your project.
A significant price difference between proposals almost always means a significant difference in what’s actually being built. That doesn’t mean the most expensive proposal is automatically the right choice - but it does mean the cheapest one deserves serious scrutiny before you sign.
Read Also: The Benefits of Investing in a Custom Deck
Outdoor living projects are long-term investments. The deck you build this summer will be part of your home for the next 20 to 30 years. The decisions made during the proposal stage - about materials, craftsmanship, and who you trust to do the work - determine what that investment looks like a decade from now.
Find a builder you trust, ask the right questions, and build something worth building.
Different Process. Different Standards. Different Results.

January 20, 2026
Ignite Your Backyard: Using Fire to Transform Your Outdoor Living Space
In Southwestern Pennsylvania, outdoor living looks different than it does in warmer or more predictable climates. Homeowners want spaces that feel intentional, comfortable, and usable beyond just a few summer months. That reality is why outdoor fireplaces plays such an important role in outdoor living design throughout Pittsburgh and the surrounding areas.
When planned correctly, fire features do far more than add visual interest. They extend the usable season, anchor gathering spaces, and create the kind of atmosphere that turns a backyard into a place people actually want to spend time - whether that’s a cool spring evening, a crisp fall night, or a late-October Steelers game with friends.
The key is understanding how different fire features function, where each one works best, and how Pittsburgh’s climate affects performance, material selection, and long-term durability.
Why having Fire Feature matters more in the Pittsburgh Climate?
Pittsburgh homeowners face a unique mix of environmental and human factors that directly influence outdoor design decisions:
- Cool evenings for much of the year
- Frequent temperature swings
- Freeze-thaw cycles through winter
- Wind exposure in open yards and elevated decks
- HOA and municipal restrictions in certain neighborhoods
Because of this, fire features are rarely just decorative. They are most often incorporated as functional season extenders and social anchors, allowing outdoor spaces to stay relevant and comfortable well beyond peak summer.
When fire is thoughtfully integrated into a larger design whether it is alongside cover, around a seating layout, and protected from wind it changes how and when a space is used…and most importantly for how long it can be used.
Read Also: Tips for Designing a Deck or Patio for all Seasons
Outdoor Fireplaces: The Anchor Feature
Outdoor fireplaces are consistently our most requested fire feature in Pittsburgh-area projects. They naturally become the focal point of the space, shaping everything from furniture layout to lighting, televisions, and overall flow.
Unlike fire pits or portable features, fireplaces are almost never left exposed to the elements. Most are integrated into covered decks, patios, or porches, which protects the structure and dramatically increases how often the space is used.
In practice, outdoor fireplaces serve three primary roles:
- Establishing a visual and architectural focal point
- Creating a natural gathering zone
- Providing ambient warmth and comfort
Gas vs. Wood Outdoor Fireplaces
Homeowners are often drawn to the romance of a wood-burning fireplace - the smell, the crackle, the experience. In reality, however, gas fireplaces dominate due to ease of use and reliability.
Gas fireplaces offer instant ignition, consistent flame control, and minimal maintenance. While there are installation considerations with gas, they are typically manageable and often outweighed by the convenience factor.
Wood fireplaces remain appealing, but HOA restrictions, operating effort, and exhaust requirements lead many homeowners to choose gas. We have been seeing a growing middle ground in the ‘hybrid fireplace’, which combines a wood-burning unit with a gas starter, offering quick ignition while preserving the traditional experience.
Managing Heat Expectations
It’s important to set realistic expectations and it seems obvious to say outdoor fireplaces do not produce the same heat output as indoor units. Because outdoor spaces are open, heat dissipates quickly and wind plays a major role. With that being said, many people are surprised how much heat even a screened in area can maintain.
For this reason, fireplaces are often paired with dedicated outdoor heaters such as Infratech, especially in covered areas. The fireplace provides atmosphere and gathering appeal, while supplemental heaters handle sustained warmth. Best of both worlds.
Fire Pits: Flexible, Social, and Complementary

How Fire Pits Are Typically Used?
Fire pits are usually the second most requested fire feature and function differently than fireplaces. Rather than anchoring the entire space, they tend to act as standalone or complementary features, most commonly incorporated into patios that are part of a larger outdoor environment.
They encourage casual interaction, conversation, and flexible seating arrangements, making them ideal for entertaining.
Gas vs. Wood Fire Pits
As with fireplaces, gas fire pits are far more common in the Pittsburgh area. Convenience, cleanliness, and HOA considerations push most homeowners toward gas.
That said, many still want the experience of wood. Similar to fireplaces this has led to increased use of wood-burning fire pits with gas starters, particularly because smoke can escape upward without the need for a chimney. This approach blends convenience with tradition and works especially well in open patio layouts. If you live in an HOA check with them first, most of the issues we see with wood burning fire pits comes from HOA bylaws.
Climate Specific Design Considerations
Because fire pits are more exposed than fireplaces, Pittsburgh’s climate introduces additional challenges that have to be considered:
- Drainage is critical. Poor drainage can lead to standing water, component failure, and freeze damage.
- Material selection matters. Steel components can rust if not properly protected. Yes, even stainless steel will rust. We have seen it happen numerous times.
- Stone surfaces require care. Granite fire pit tops, in particular, can crack during extreme winter temperatures if not detailed correctly. A more outdoor friendly option to consider might be a concrete top.
A fire pit that works beautifully in a mild climate may struggle here if these factors aren’t addressed from the start.
Fire Tables and Torches: Atmosphere Over Heat
Fire Tables: Supplemental Comfort and Style

Fire tables serve a different role than fireplaces or fire pits. They are rarely the primary fire feature in a Pittsburgh backyard. Instead, they function as accent pieces that enhance seating areas and add ambiance.Interestingly, many homeowners choose fire tables after their main project is complete, adding them once they begin using the space and identifying opportunities for additional comfort.
Fire tables work best in lounge-style seating arrangements, especially in covered or semi-covered areas. While they don’t provide significant heat for large spaces, they add warmth and visual interest at close range. Imagine a coffee table, that happens to have fire coming out of it.
Torches and Accent Fire: Lead the Way

Torches are not intended to heat an outdoor space. Their value lies in atmosphere, visual rhythm, and subtle illumination. When used thoughtfully, they can:
- Illuminate pathways and edges
- Add vertical visual interest
- Compliment larger fire features
- Define an outdoor area or zone
Because of these reasons torches tend to work best as part of a layered fire design rather than as standalone elements.
Common Questions About Outdoor Fire Features
1. Do fire features really extend the outdoor season?
Yes, especially in covered spaces. While fire alone may not provide full warmth, it significantly improves comfort when paired with good design and supplemental heating.
2. Are outdoor fireplaces worth it if they don’t produce a lot of heat?
Yes, investing in outdoor fireplaces is definitely worth the money in Pittsburgh. Their value is in atmosphere, gathering, and visual impact rather than raw heat output.
3. Can fire features be used in winter?
Occasionally, yes. Most homeowners primarily use them from early spring through late fall.
4. Are fire pits or fireplaces better for Pittsburgh?
Fireplaces are better suited for covered, structured spaces. Fire pits excel in open patios and flexible layouts. Because we specialize in decks and porches we install much more fireplaces than fire pits. However, our landscape friends would likely tell you the opposite. So it depends on your use case.
5. Which costs more, wood or gas firepits?
This is one a lot of homeowners are surprised by. While wood-burning units can appear less expensive initially, the added costs of proper exhaust design, chimneys, and code compliance often bring the total investment close to that of gas systems. From a usability standpoint, gas tends to win on faster startup, less maintenance, HOA compatibility, and predictable performance. Wood retains its appeal, but for most homeowners, the convenience of gas outweighs the operational effort of wood.
Designing Fire as Part of a Complete System
The most successful fire features are never designed in isolation. They work as part of a broader outdoor living system that considers:
- Cover and enclosure
- Seating layout
- Wind exposure
- Supplemental heating
- Lighting
When fire is integrated thoughtfully, it becomes more than a feature; it becomes part of how people gather, relax, and experience their outdoor space. In a climate like Pittsburgh’s, that difference matters.
Build Outdoor Fireplaces that make your Backyard usable Longer
If you’re comparing outdoor fireplaces or saving outdoor fireplace ideas, the smartest next step is getting a plan that fits your space, your lifestyle, and Pittsburgh’s weather. The right layout, cover, wind protection, and material choices are what turn an outdoor fireplace from a nice feature into something you actually use week after week.
If you are looking from a team that designs and builds without compromising on quality and finish, contact SelectDecks. With over 20+ years of experiences, our outdoor living contractors design outdoor fireplaces that integrate fire features into decks, porches, and covered outdoor living spaces.
Contact us today to discuss your vision and let’s design a fire feature that actually gets used, not just admired.

December 16, 2025
Pittsburgh Winter Deck Guide: Maintenance, Safety, and Planning Tips
Let’s face it, Pittsburgh winters are hard - kind of like its blue collar persona. The Holiday season brings snow, ice, and freezing temperatures into the area and unfortunately most homeowners don’t think about outdoor living and decks often get overlooked. Fortunately, we do think about decks, constantly, and so we put together this Winter Deck Guide to help.
More and more, we are seeing that decks, patios, and porches aren’t just for summer.In fact, most of our clients incorporate features that allow them to extend their outdoor living well into the fall - but that’s for another blog. For now we want to focus on the opportunities and demands placed on your deck by the Holidays and Winter weather. We all know decks are a great place to gather with friends and family, what many don’t know is that includes during the harsh winter months. This guide will walk you through deck care, maintenance, safety, protecting your investment, and why now is the perfect time to be thinking about your outdoor living area.
How Pittsburgh Winters Impact Your Deck (and Why It Matters)?

Freezing Ground and Frost Heave
When building decks - and any structure - in this area we deal with something called the ‘frost line’, which is the point in the ground where water no longer freezes. In this region that is 36” deep. This is extremely important for decks and probably the thing that inspectors look at most closely. The reason is because if your deck post footings are not deep enough (past 36”) groundwater can freeze and literally push deck posts up causing the entire structure to fail, this is called frost heave.
Snow Loads:
The weight of snow can affect 2 things when it comes to your deck. If you have a roof over the deck it absolutely should have been built to withstand snow loads, this is pretty common practice in this area. But decks also need to account for snow loads as well. In the past a lot of builders went by the standard 50psf deck load (40 dead load / 10 live load). Starting in 2021 the IRC started including snow loads in their deck span charts and it’s absolutely critical in our area that your deck is built to allow for the weight of snow.
Ice/Snow Buildup:
There is an obvious safety issue to ice & snow buildup on or around your deck which we’ll touch on later. But one thing that most homeowners overlook is ice and snow building up above your doors and windows. If you have an open deck that sets just below an entry door that is a prime location for water intrusion if snow or ice gets above the threshold of the door and then thaws out. That water has to go somewhere and what happens a lot of times, especially with older doors that aren’t sealed very well, is that the water can actually enter your house and cause damage to hardwood floors, framing under the door, or the deck ledger board. None of which are welcome or safe. If you see snow or ice buildup on top of your deck and higher than your door or windows it would be prudent to take a broom or something and get it away from that area.
Fasteners:
Pittsburgh weather is hard on fasteners and hardware. The fluctuating temperatures put stress on fasteners, rail systems, and connections. Even the best hardware made specifically for decks is susceptible to issues. Some things to watch for are:
- Loose railings
- Spongy feeling deck boards
- Cracking or splitting of framing material
- Visible movement of decking, railing, trim, etc
Most of these aren’t major safety concerns initially, however if left unchecked they can and will turn into larger issues.
Read Also: Average Lifespan of your Deck
Winter Deck Maintenance and Safety Tips for Homeowners
1. Snow Removal Best Practices
If you have composite decking, stick to a plastic shovel. Avoid metal edges that can scrape the surface. When shoveling, go in the direction of the deck boards to reduce the chance of catching an edge.
If you want a quick-win habit: don’t wait for multiple storms to build up. A little snow cleared regularly is much easier on your deck than heavy accumulation.
2. Ice Melt (Most Asked Question)
Generally speaking, calcium chloride ice melt is usually okay for composite decking, but every manufacturer can be different. If you’re unsure, check your decking brand’s recommendations (or ask your deck builder).
What to avoid: rock salt / sodium chloride. It’s harsher, can be messy, and can be tough on surfaces over time.
3. Preventing Slips and Falls on Deck Stairs
Deck stairs and landings tend to ice up first—and they’re usually the biggest slip hazard. If you’re using your deck in winter, do a quick safety check before stepping out:
- Make sure handrails are solid before putting weight on them.
- Keep stairs and landings cleared more often than the main deck surface.
- If you regularly use the deck in winter, consider adding traction (mats or grip strips) in the highest-risk spots.
Read Also: Transform your home with Safe and Stylish Handrails
4. Drainage and Debris Buildup
Winter drainage is really about one thing: water needs a clean path out. When debris builds up between boards, it can trap moisture. That trapped moisture freezes, expands, and can contribute to long-term wear. Keep the gaps clear so meltwater drains through and off the deck.
Most important: keep debris away from the ledger area where the deck connects to the house. That area is a common failure point in deck issues, so keeping it clear matters.
Winter Mistakes to Avoid
Don’t let snow pile up for long periods. Leaf blowers can work well for light snow, but the main goal is consistency. Don’t assume damage can wait until spring.
If you see something loose now, it rarely improves on its own—plus spring is when many Pittsburgh deck builders are booked out.
Quick Winter Deck Inspection Checklist (5 Minutes)
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If you want a simple routine, do this once a month (or after heavy storms):
- Check railings with a gentle shake—no movement should be noticeable.
- Walk the deck and feel for “soft” or spongy boards.
- Look underneath (if accessible) for cracked wood, rusted connectors, or pooling water.
- Check the stairs carefully—treads, stringers, and handrail posts.
- Clear debris near the house connection point and around posts.
If anything feels unsafe, stop using that area until it’s addressed.
When to Call a Pittsburgh Deck Builder
DIY maintenance is great; until it becomes a safety risk. It’s time to call a pro if you notice:
- Railing movement that’s getting worse
- Deck boards that flex more than they used to
- Visible shifting/leaning posts
- Cracks in key framing members
- Areas where water sits and doesn’t drain properly
- Any concern around the deck-to-house connection area
A quick inspection now can prevent a much bigger repair later.
Read Also: Questions you should be asking your Pittsburgh Deck Builder
Holiday Deck Decorating and Hosting Ideas (Yes, You Can Still Use Your Deck)
We’ll say it: winter is still a great season for deck decorating and outdoor hosting; if you plan it right.
1. Holiday Lighting Ideas
Low Voltage Outdoor Lighting - a well thought out, deck low voltage lighting plan only adds to the look and feel of holiday lighting. It can help create a warm glow to your home, and add safety to driveways and backyards.
Christmas Lights - yes, Christmas lights on your deck. Most of our covered decks now have an outlet(s) in the ceiling to plug your Christmas rope lights right into.
2. Outdoor Heating
We hear stories all the time about Pittsburgh homeowners enjoying their outdoor fireplace in the winter. Not only is it a cozy, warm place to gather but it can also be an area where family members and friends can gather if things get a little too crowded inside over the Holidays.
If a 4 season room is something you’re considering this is right up your alley. 4 season rooms are conditioned, meaning they have heating and cooling just like the rest of your house. This gives you a heated, well lit area to entertain your guests.
3. Grilling
Yes, grilling outside with snow on the ground. How else are you going to prepare steak for your guests? Well placed outdoor heaters, such as Infratech’s, can provide you with a warm space around your grill.
Read Also: Deck Designs, Trends and Ideas for 2026
Winter Deck Planning FAQ
1. Can decks be built in winter?
Yes, absolutely, decks can be built in winters with some understanding. Regular scheduling is pretty much out the window because of weather unpredictability. This is where your choice of deck builder is critical. If you’re going to have a deck built in the winter it is extremely important that you choose a Pittsburgh deck builder who will communicate with you regularly. There are all sorts of things that can affect a jobsite in the winter, as long as everyone is clear on what to expect you should have a positive experience.
2. Why is Winter ideal for deck planning/building?
- #1 reason, you’re not competing for the attention of your builder. There’s just less work and less projects to manage in the Winter than there is in the Spring, Summer, and Fall so you’re going to have much more focus on your job.
- Permit offices aren’t as busy: Wait time for permits can be drastically reduced from weeks to days just because plan reviewers and inspectors aren’t juggling dozens of projects in their area.
- Unfortunately, material pricing does not drop in the colder months like a lot of homeowners think or hope and sourcing materials can sometimes be challenging. This is where communicating with your builder becomes even more critical.
3. What are some timing considerations and benefits of deck building in the Winter?
Pittsburgh deck builder phones start ringing steadily in mid to late February and continue until mid November. Within that time frame there are a few surges, and one of them is the early Spring demand when many homeowners want to be able to walk out on their new deck as soon as the weather turns nice. That means the project needs to be completed early April, which depending on the size and scope means it needs to start weeks in advance of that. If you keep reverse engineering the timeline that puts the planning stages right into the middle of Winter. If you want an early Spring deck to walk out on, the planning needs to start now.
4. Is rock salt safe for composite decking?
In most cases, it’s better to avoid it. Calcium chloride is typically the safer choice for composite decking, but always confirm based on your specific decking brand.
Planning your new deck in Pittsburgh Now? Contact SelectDecks
Winter weather is when your deck will be tested, it is not some dormant structure that just gets beaten down by the harsh elements. What happens during the colder months and how you react to it will affect longevity, safety, and overall enjoyment of your outdoor living space. Be proactive - most of the items mentioned above consume very little time or require much effort, but the payoff is huge. By taking just a few steps you can prevent costly future repair. Outdoor spaces still matter during the Holidays and a well-maintained, carefully planned and executed deck can easily become your favorite family gathering place.
Lastly, for the planners out there (and you know who you are) we’re talking to you here. If you want to be ahead of the game, now is the time to start working with the best Pittsburgh deck builder; SelectDecks. Contact us today to get started with planning your deck now.
The weather will turn, and when it does you don’t want to be stuck in the massive group of homeowners trying to lock down your deck builder. Homeowners that think ahead, prepare early, and are ready to execute the plan will get ahead.
Ready to Create Your Dream Outdoor Space? Contact Us Today!
