
Sidney Deck and Fence is a deck builder serving homeowners in Troy, OH with composite decks, wood decks, fences, and outdoor structures. We handle every permit through the City of Troy Building Department and respond to every inquiry within one business day.

Troy homeowners with older Craftsman and Foursquare homes near downtown often choose composite because it holds up to Ohio humidity without the annual staining that wood requires. Our composite deck installation service includes material selection and full permit handling from the City of Troy.
Troy has a large number of postwar ranch homes on modest lots where a straightforward pressure-treated deck is the most practical fit. Wood decking is the most budget-friendly option and still holds up well in Miami County's climate when properly maintained.
Many Troy homes from the 1950s and 1960s have decks that are reaching the end of their useful life. If boards have softened, posts have shifted, or railings have gone loose, catching the problem now - before it reaches the frame - saves money and keeps the structure safe.
Troy summers are humid, and unsealed wood decks gray out and start to split within a season or two. A proper stain and seal before the wet weather arrives is the most cost-effective maintenance task for any wood deck in Miami County.
Troy neighborhoods with smaller lot sizes and adjacent properties often call for a privacy fence. Wood fencing gives homeowners a natural look that complements the older brick and Craftsman-style homes that are common throughout the city.
Troy gets regular afternoon thunderstorms through summer. A covered deck or patio roof lets you stay outside through the rain and extends the usable season for your outdoor space - a practical upgrade for any home that already has a deck.
A significant portion of Troy's housing stock was built before 1970, and many homes date back to the early 1900s. Older homes like these carry decades of settling, and the ground around them has shifted with every winter since they were built. Miami County sits on clay-heavy glacial soils that expand when wet and shrink when dry. That movement is what pushes deck footings out of level, heaves fence posts, and cracks concrete flatwork over time. A deck builder who does not account for local soil conditions when planning footings will leave you with a structure that starts to move within a few years.
Troy winters also bring repeated freeze-thaw cycles from late fall through early spring. The ground regularly crosses above and below freezing during that window, which means anything anchored in it is under constant pressure. Ohio building code requires footings to reach below the local frost line - approximately 36 inches for this area - and that requirement exists for a reason that Troy homeowners see firsthand every spring. Homes near the Great Miami River on the west side of the city can also face drainage challenges after heavy rain, which puts additional pressure on any structure in contact with the ground.
Our crew works throughout Troy regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect deck building here. When we pull permits through the City of Troy, we know what the building department expects at each inspection stage - which means fewer delays and less uncertainty on your project timeline.
Troy's older in-town neighborhoods - especially the streets near the Public Square and along the Hobart Corporation corridor on the east side - are full of Craftsman bungalows and American Foursquare-style homes from the 1910s through the 1940s. These homes often have uneven grade around the foundation and front porches that set a visual tone the backyard should match. The postwar ranch homes in neighborhoods that spread outward from downtown in the 1950s and 1960s present a different set of considerations, with lower door thresholds and flatter lots that often suit grade-level or low-profile decks.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Tipp City, OH, just a few miles south on I-75, where we work on a similar mix of older and postwar homes with the same Miami County clay-soil challenges.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form on this site. We respond within one business day. You do not need a plan or measurements ready - a rough idea of what you have in mind is enough to get started.
We come to your property, assess the site, and walk through material and design options with you. You get a written estimate with a clear scope and total cost before any contract is signed - no hidden charges, no obligation to proceed.
We handle the permit application with the City of Troy Building Department. Approval typically takes one to three weeks. Once approved, the crew starts and most Troy decks are complete within one to two weeks of breaking ground.
We coordinate the final building inspection with the City of Troy. Once the inspector signs off, the deck is yours - fully permitted, inspected, and documented for your records and future resale.
We serve Troy and the surrounding Miami County area. No obligation - just an honest look at your yard and a written estimate you can count on.
(937) 658-9020Troy is the county seat of Miami County and home to roughly 26,000 residents. The city is built around a classic Ohio downtown square - a hub of local commerce that most Troy residents know as the geographic and social center of the city. The surrounding neighborhoods are a study in 20th-century Ohio residential development: Craftsman bungalows and American Foursquare homes from the 1910s through the 1940s closer to downtown, postwar ranch homes and Cape Cods from the 1950s and 1960s spreading outward, and a smaller ring of newer subdivisions on the edges. The Great Miami River runs along the western edge of the city, and homes near the river floodplain deal with drainage considerations that homes farther east do not. Hobart Corporation, the commercial equipment manufacturer, has called Troy home for over a century and remains one of the city's most recognized employers.
Most of Troy's housing stock is owner-occupied single-family homes, and long-term homeownership is common here - the kind of community where residents invest in their properties because they plan to stay. The Miami County Fairgrounds, held on the north side of the city each summer, draws residents from across the county and reflects the agricultural and community character that Troy has maintained alongside its manufacturing heritage. We work throughout Troy and also serve homeowners in nearby Piqua, OH, just north along the Great Miami River, where we encounter a very similar mix of older housing stock and the same clay-soil footing challenges.
Low-maintenance composite decking that looks great for decades.
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Learn MoreSpring is our busiest season in Miami County - reach out now to lock in your estimate and get on the schedule before summer.