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Licensed & insured · Front Range

Grounds kept sharp. Water kept low.

Recurring commercial landscape maintenance across Colorado's Front Range — plus real expertise in native and low-water landscapes most crews don't know how to manage.

Same crew every visit · Scope in writing · Irrigation audited, not guessed
Colorado xeriscape planting — blue grama and other native grasses, yucca, and drought-tolerant perennials in a gravel and flagstone bed
Native & xeric planting
Grounds maintenance worker in a high-visibility vest digging out a lawn sprinkler head to replace it
Irrigation, checked
Low-water perennial bed with salvia, coral bells, boulders, and mulch in a Colorado demonstration garden
Beds kept intentional
2026
Colorado-built
100%
Licensed & insured
1
Crew, every visit
6
Services under contract
What We Do

One contract. The whole property.

Property managers, HOAs, industrial parks, storage yards, retail centers. Turf, beds, rock, natives, and the irrigation that keeps all of it alive — handled on a schedule you can plan a budget around.

Recurring Maintenance

Mow, edge, trim, blow. Weekly or biweekly contracts, same crew, same day.

Weekly or biweekly

Native & Xeriscape Management

Natives aren't low-maintenance — they're different-maintenance. Cut back on their schedule, not a mower's.

Pruned to the plant

Irrigation Management

Audits, repairs, controller scheduling, leak-finding. Water is the biggest line item you can actually move.

Audited, not guessed

Seasonal Cleanups

Spring cutback, fall leaf, storm debris. Property ready before anyone complains.

Spring & fall

Turf & Bed Care

Fertilization, aeration, weed control. Beds edged and mulched, rock beds kept clean.

Beds and rock

Enhancements

Plantings, mulch and rock refresh, drought-adapted upgrades that lower next year's water bill.

Lowers next year's bill
Native & Low-Water

Low-water isn't low-effort.

In Colorado, water is the biggest line item a property manager can actually move — rates keep climbing and restrictions keep tightening. But managing a xeriscape is a different skill, not less skill. Most crews were trained on turf and treat everything else like turf.

Natives get cut back on their own schedule

Blue grama and buffalograss go dormant. Ornamental grasses get cut back in late winter, not in September when they still look shaggy. Shear a penstemon at the wrong time and you lose next season's bloom. A route sheet doesn't know that. A crew that's managed natives does.

Rock and gravel beds have their own weed pressure

Rock isn't maintenance-free — it's a seed bed with good drainage. Left alone, it fills in. Kept clean and edged, it reads as intentional design instead of a corner nobody handles.

A stuck valve is a four-figure water bill nobody catches

Nobody walks the property at 4 a.m. when the zones run. We check heads, pressure, and run times, and we find the leak before it shows up on the invoice.

Managed low-water still looks managed

The reason xeriscape gets a bad name is that it's usually neglected, not designed. Edged, cut back on schedule, and weeded, a low-water landscape looks deliberate — and costs less to run every year.

Drip irrigation line running through a mulched planting bed, watering plants at the root instead of overhead
The short version

Drip beats spray on beds. Dialed-in run times beat a controller nobody has touched since install. And a plant that belongs here needs less of everything — once someone knows how to prune it.

The Property Care Standard

What you're actually buying.

A maintenance contract is easy to sell and easy to let slide. Here's the standard we hold — whether you're walking the property with us or not.

Same crew, same day

You get the same people every visit. They learn your property, and they notice what changed.

Natives pruned on their schedule

Cut a native at the wrong time and you lose a season. We prune to the plant, not the route sheet.

Irrigation audited, not just switched on

We check heads, pressure, and run times. A stuck valve is a four-figure water bill nobody catches.

Scope in writing

You know what's included before the season starts. No surprise line items in July.

Snow is its own contract

We don't plow. Our sister brand does.

Snow removal, sanding, and de-icing run on a separate seasonal contract with different crews and different equipment. That's Snow Care — same family, same standard, signed on its own.

Go to Frontier Snow Care
How It Works

Four steps. No surprises.

01

Walkthrough

We walk the property with you — turf, beds, rock, natives, irrigation. We note what's been neglected and what's costing you water.

02

Scope & Bid

You get the scope in writing: what's included, how often, and what's billed separately. One number you can put in a budget.

03

Scheduled Service

Same crew, same day, on the schedule we agreed to. Beds and natives handled on their timing, not the mower's.

04

Seasonal Review

We sit down at season's end: what held up, what needs enhancing, and where next year's water bill can come down.

Where We Work

Maintaining the Front Range.

Denver metro, the foothills, and south along the corridor. If your property is on the Front Range, we can put it on a route.

DenverLakewoodArvadaWheat RidgeGoldenLittletonCentennialParkerCastle RockBoulder+ surrounding
Ready When You Are

Let's walk your property.

Tell us what you manage and where. We'll walk it, put the scope in writing, and give you a number you can budget against — turf, beds, natives, and irrigation included.