Fence Installation for Frisco's First Wave of Replacements
Frisco's Original Fences Are Hitting Their First Replacement Cycle Right Now
Frisco built fast. The subdivisions that went up during the city’s first major growth wave — the communities developed between the late 1990s and the mid-2000s, when Frisco was adding residents faster than almost any other city in the country — are now 20 to 25 years old. The cedar fences installed in those neighborhoods were put in the ground in Collin County clay soil, and Collin County clay soil does what it always does: it expands when wet, contracts when dry, and works on fence posts with every cycle. Twenty years of that process produces the same result in a 2001 Frisco subdivision that thirty years of it produces in a 1985 Plano subdivision. The posts lean. The fence follows.
The difference in Frisco is that this is the first time these homeowners have been through a fence replacement. They are not replacing a replacement — they are replacing an original. The material choice, the HOA specification review, and the post depth conversation are all happening for the first time on properties where the original fence has simply run its course on schedule.
Plano Fence Company serves Frisco homeowners through that first replacement with free on-site estimates, HOA requirement review, and installation that addresses the Collin County soil conditions that ended the original fence’s service life.
HOA Compliance in Frisco’s Communities
Frisco’s master-planned communities were written with HOA covenants that reflect more recent thinking about fence materials than the older HOA documents governing Plano’s established neighborhoods. Some Frisco communities explicitly approve vinyl privacy fencing alongside cedar — a material flexibility that many of Plano’s 1980s-era HOA covenants do not offer. Others specify aluminum rather than steel for ornamental applications along street-facing exposures. A few of the newer developments along the Dallas North Tollway and SH-121 corridors have adopted more detailed architectural standards that govern stain color and fence profile alongside material and height.
The practical effect is that the HOA compliance conversation in Frisco requires reading the specific covenant rather than assuming the same cedar board-on-board default that applies in most of Plano’s older communities. We review the relevant HOA documentation before every Frisco estimate and specify materials that will pass architectural review before installation begins. Wood fence installation covers cedar material selection and HOA specification considerations that apply across Frisco’s residential communities.
New Installation in Frisco’s Active Development Zones
Frisco is still building. The developments along the northern SH-121 extension and the communities taking shape around the city’s newer growth corridors represent active first-fence demand — homeowners moving into properties that have never had a fence and making material and style decisions from a blank slate. First-fence buyers in Frisco’s active development zones are choosing between cedar, vinyl, iron, and chain link based on HOA specifications, lot size, and budget — often without a prior fence on the property to use as a reference point. We work through those decisions as part of the free estimate process.
Commercial Fencing Along the Dallas North Tollway Corridor
The concentration of corporate campuses, mixed-use developments, and business relocations along Frisco’s Dallas North Tollway corridor generates consistent commercial fencing demand alongside the city’s residential market. Perimeter security fencing for corporate properties, ornamental iron for business frontages, and HOA common area fencing for the amenity-rich communities surrounding Frisco’s commercial core all represent active commercial work. Commercial fencing covers specifications, permitting, and project logistics for commercial installations across Frisco’s business corridors.
Serving Frisco from Plano
We serve Frisco homeowners and commercial properties across the 75033, 75034, and 75035 zip codes from our Plano base. Estimates are free, on-site, and scheduled across all of Frisco from the city’s first-wave subdivisions entering their replacement cycle to the newest developments still receiving their first fence installations. Every project starts with a real look at the property and the HOA requirements before a number is quoted.
Frisco, Texas