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Water features that change the room.

Sheet walls, pondless waterfalls, runnels, and fountains placed where the sound and the movement reach the spots you sit — the patio, the dining table, the seat by the spa — so they pull a space together and soften the noise around it. Trusted in San Diego County for over forty years.

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Modern rectangular pool with sheet-descent water wall built into a graded San Diego lot, structure set before the finish

It’s about where you hear it.

A water feature earns its place by what it does to the space around it. The sound has to reach the seating — the patio, the dining table, the chair by the spa — or it is movement you watch and never feel. The face has to sit in the sightline from where people gather. A sheet wall behind the seating turns a hard patio into a calm one and covers the road noise off the canyon; a bubbling boulder by the door greets you on the way in. We start with where you sit and what you want it to do, then place the feature to deliver it.

How it runs matters as much as where it goes. The pump gets sized to the flow the feature needs — undersize it and the sheet wall dribbles, oversize it and it splashes and roars when you wanted a murmur — and we tune the sound to the room rather than letting it overpower the conversation. The plumbing, the power, and the fill line all run hidden below grade, placed by one team so nothing is left exposed.

Underneath, the basin and footing are built to the soil so the wall stays plumb and the feature doesn’t settle and crack, and the feature is waterproofed so the water stays where it belongs. That structural work is done right, in-house, and we stand behind it. When a spot you want will not carry the sound or the structure, we tell you and find the one that does. We are not order-takers. We have built water features this way since 1984, and we carry the ten-year structural liability on the work.

What’s included.

  • Placement and sizing tuned to where you sit — so the sound and the movement reach the seating
  • Engineered footing and a basin sized to the feature’s volume so the face stays plumb
  • Sheet walls and sheer-descent spillways in your specified stone, concrete, or metal face
  • Pondless rock waterfalls with a gravel-filled below-grade reservoir — no standing open water
  • Runnels, rills, and spillover channels that move water between grades or zones
  • Fountains, bubbling boulders, and standalone basin features
  • Buried pump vault, correctly sized pumps, filtration, and automatic fill line tied to your supply
  • Hidden suction and return plumbing, dedicated GFCI electrical, and low-voltage feature lighting
  • Waterproofing and a sealed basin so the feature’s own water stays where it belongs, plus startup and handoff

Our process.

01 · Discovery

Where you sit

We walk the property and figure out where you gather and what you want the water to do — soften a hard patio, cover road noise, greet you at the door. Placement and the sound get settled before a single number is priced.

02 · Design

3D & engineering

You see the feature in 3D before we dig. The face, the drop, and the sound get drawn alongside the structure: footing, basin volume, pump sizing, vault location, and the waterproofing the soil requires.

03 · Build

Footing to finish

Excavation, footing, basin, waterproofing, hidden plumbing, vault, electrical, stone face, and finish. Every phase runs in-house, in order, with one crew accountable for the one before it.

04 · Handoff

Startup & warranty

We fill the basin, tune the pump and the flow, and walk you through running and cleaning it. Then the ten-year structural liability is ours, on the footing, the basin, and the rest of the structure.

Selected water feature projects.

Sheet-descent water wall with a hidden basin and buried pump vault on a San Diego County property
Sheet wall · hidden basin
Sheer-descent wall, pump in a buried vault
Pondless rock waterfall built down a canyon-edge slope in San Diego's backcountry
Pondless · canyon slope
Pondless rock waterfall, canyon-edge
Runnel and spillover fountain integrated into hardscape on a graded San Diego lot
Runnel & fountain
Spillover runnel, integrated into hardscape

Why bring us your water feature.

Forty-two years, same owner

Darren Earl has been building outdoor features in San Diego County since 1984. He has watched which basins hold and which footings settle over four decades on this region’s soil and slopes. The owner prices the job and has carried the ten-year structural liability on it for four decades. His in-house crew, not a rotating cast of subs, builds it.

One team, no subcontractors

A water feature is excavation, concrete, plumbing, and electrical in one small footprint. Hand that to a chain of subs and the conduit ends up in the wrong place and the basin leaks where two trades met. We run every phase in-house. One contract, one number to call, no seam for a leak to hide in.

Ten-year liability, clean record

California holds the builder structurally liable for ten years. We carry that on the footing, the basin, and the structure that holds it, and we have carried it clean for forty, zero construction complaints. That exposure is why we build the structure right instead of just running a hose over rock.

Water feature questions, answered straight.

A well-built feature is mostly hands-off. Expect to clean the filter or skimmer basket every few weeks, wipe the pump intake, and check water chemistry on a fountain or sheet wall so mineral scale doesn’t build on the face. The main water loss is evaporation, which runs higher in summer and on a wide sheet wall with a lot of exposed surface. We plumb an automatic fill line tied to your water supply, so the basin tops itself off and the pump never runs dry. If a feature loses water fast, that is a leak or a splash-out problem, not normal evaporation, and it points to a basin or liner that was built wrong.
A pondless waterfall has no standing pool of open water. The water falls over rock, then disappears into a gravel-filled basin below grade where the pump recirculates it back to the top. There is nothing for a child to fall into, nothing for mosquitoes to breed in, and no fish or algae to manage. A pond holds open water, plants, and often fish, which means more volume, more filtration, and ongoing biological maintenance. Most homeowners who want the sound and movement of water without the upkeep or the safety concern choose pondless. We build both, but on a slope or a lot with small children, pondless is usually the right structural and practical call.
It depends on the size, the type, and the materials and equipment the feature calls for. A compact fountain on a flat patio is the low end. A wide sheet wall or a multi-drop rock waterfall with a large hidden basin, a buried vault, and a high-flow pump is well above that. The stone or metal face, the pump, and the vault are the levers that move the number most, and the right pick depends on the sound and the look you are after, not on the biggest margin. We give you a fixed-price concept after we see the lot, with the line items called out so you know exactly what you are paying for and why.
All of it runs in-house, and all of it is hidden. The pump sits in a buried vault or basin sized to the flow the feature needs, fed by suction and return lines we run below grade. Power comes off a dedicated GFCI circuit on its own switch or automation, so you turn the feature on and off without touching the panel. An automatic fill line ties the basin to your water supply. Because one team runs the excavation, the plumbing, and the electrical, the conduit and the pipe all get placed in the right order and the right depth, with nothing left exposed and nothing for a future trade to dig into.
Yes, and a slope is often exactly where a waterfall belongs. A change in level gives the water somewhere to go, so a hillside lets a multi-drop fall read naturally instead of looking forced. It also tends to put the feature in the sightline from the seating below, which is where you want to hear and watch it from. We build it to last: the basin and footing are built to the soil, the feature is waterproofed and sealed, and the whole structure is done in-house by one team. We have built hillside waterfalls across San Diego’s backcountry since 1984 and stand behind every one.

Tell us about the feature.

Tell us where you sit and what you want the water to do — calm the patio, cover the road noise, greet you at the door. We’ll come look at the lot, place it where it works, and give you a fixed-price concept. No charge for the visit.

Hours
Mon–Fri · 8:00am – 5:00pm
Saturday · By appointment
Sunday · Closed
License
CSLB #523467 · Licensed & insured

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