Masonry and Landscaping in Peabody, MA
Owner-led hardscape and outdoor construction for Peabody’s historic homes and coastal properties — engineered for New England, permitted properly, and run by one person from quote to final walk-through.
Peabody pairs walkable historic districts downtown with the North Shore’s flood-and-frost reality — and that changes how outdoor work has to be done here. A patio, fence, or retaining wall that’s visible from the street in the Washington Street Historic District can’t simply be installed; it has to clear the Peabody Historical Commission first. We know that process, we know Peabody’s permit thresholds, and we know what freeze-thaw winters and a downtown floodplain do to the wrong materials by year five. When you call AB Mendez Masonry & Landscaping, the person who quotes your Peabody project is the person who runs it. Call (781) 731-5303 for a free on-site estimate.
What we build in Peabody
Outdoor construction services for Peabody properties
Masonry & Hardscaping

Custom Patio Installation
Bluestone, granite, clay brick, and pavers set on frost-rated bases that survive Peabody winters.
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Walkway Hardscaping
Stone, brick, and paver walkways — including period-correct restoration for historic homes.
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Retaining Wall Construction
Engineered block and natural-stone walls with proper drainage for Peabody’s sloped and ledge lots.
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Driveway Replacement
Paver, Belgian-block, concrete, and asphalt driveways built to drain and last.
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Outdoor Fireplace & Fire Pit
Custom wood-burning and gas fire features in stone and brick.
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Pool Deck Replacement
Slip-resistant, code-compliant pool surrounds for coastal Peabody yards.
View service →Landscaping, Decks & More

Landscape Design
Planting plans, garden beds, sod, and seasonal cleanups suited to Peabody’s coastal climate.
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Drainage Solutions
French drains, grading, catch basins, and downspout routing for wet Peabody lots.
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Deck Remodeling
Composite, cedar, and pressure-treated decks — built and rebuilt to code.
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Exterior House Painting
Prep, prime, and paint that holds up to Peabody’s salt-air exposure.
View service →Why local experience matters here
Peabody properties aren’t like the rest of the North Shore
Peabody’s housing stock is among the oldest in the country — Federal-era and Colonial homes, brick sidewalks, granite steps, and original stonework that a careless contractor can ruin in an afternoon. In neighborhoods like the Washington Street Historic District, the Civic Center District, and Washington Street, materials and detailing aren’t optional preferences; they’re regulated. We match existing granite and brick, reuse historic fence lines where required, and detail new work so it reads as if it has always been there.
The ground matters too. Higher, rockier neighborhoods like West Peabody and North Peabody sit on shallow ledge that forces footings and drainage to be planned, not improvised. Low-lying areas near Peabody Square, South Peabody, and Gardner Park hold water and need real grading and French-drain work. And everything within reach of the North River — especially the low ground around Peabody Square — sits in saturated, flood-prone soil where standing water and frost heave pull the wrong materials apart fast. There we build with engineered drainage, proper base depth, and rot- and frost-resistant materials because we’ve seen what happens when someone doesn’t.
All of our work is engineered for the New England reality: the Massachusetts 48-inch frost line, freeze-thaw cycling, and the coastal wind and moisture that make Peabody harder on outdoor construction than an inland town an hour west.
Permits & historic review
What Peabody requires before the first stone is set
Two layers of approval can apply to outdoor work in Peabody: standard building permits through Peabody Inspectional Services Department, and — for properties in a local historic district — a Certificate of Appropriateness from the Peabody Historical Commission before any permit will even be issued for an exterior change visible from a public way.
| Project | When a permit is required |
|---|---|
| Fence | Over 7 ft in height (and historic-district review if visible from the street) |
| Retaining wall | Over 4 ft, footing to top — or any wall supporting a surcharge (engineering required) |
| Deck | If attached, over 200 sq ft, over 30 in above grade, or serving a required exit door |
| Historic district | Any exterior change visible from a public way — Certificate of Appropriateness first |
The Peabody Historical Commission reviews demolition and permit applications affecting historic structures, so projects in those districts need to be planned weeks ahead — so historic-district projects need to be planned weeks ahead, not started on a Saturday. We handle the permit research, applications, drawings, and hearing coordination as part of the job, and we’ll tell you up front whether your project triggers historic review.
From the owner
“In Peabody, the difference between a good contractor and a bad one usually shows up at the permit counter, not the job site.”
I’ve had Peabody homeowners come to me after another crew poured a patio or set a fence in a historic district without realizing they needed Commission approval — and then got a stop-work order. Fixing that costs far more than doing it right the first time. When I take a Peabody project, I tell you exactly which approvals it needs before we touch anything, I pull the permits in my name, and I show up to the hearing if there is one. You get one point of contact for all of it — me. — Anibel Mendez
Peabody FAQ
Questions Peabody homeowners ask us
Do I need Historical Commission approval for my project?
If your property is in a local historic district and the work is visible from a public way — a front fence, a street-facing wall, a porch or deck — then yes, you’ll need a Certificate of Appropriateness before a building permit is issued. Work that isn’t visible from the street usually isn’t subject to review. We confirm which applies during the estimate.
How long does the permit process take in Peabody?
Standard building permits move quickly. Historic review adds time: the Historical Commission reviews applications affecting historic structures, so plan on a few extra weeks for historic-district work. We build that into the timeline so there are no surprises.
Can you match the existing granite and brick on an older Peabody home?
Yes. Matching historic materials — granite steps, clay brick, period fence profiles — is a core part of what we do here. Where the district requires it, we repair or replicate rather than replace with modern look-alikes.
What materials hold up best in Peabody’s climate?
In Peabody’s freeze-thaw, flood-prone conditions we spec vinyl or composite over untreated wood, stainless or hot-dip-galvanized hardware over mild steel, and sealed bluestone or granite over porous stone. The right material choice is the difference between a fence that lasts 20 years and one that fails in five.
Are you licensed and insured to work in Peabody?
Yes — we carry a Massachusetts Home Improvement Contractor registration and full liability insurance, file Dig Safe on every dig, and pull town permits in our name. That’s the baseline, not an upsell.
Do you do free estimates in Peabody?
We do. Call (781) 731-5303 or request an estimate online, and we typically schedule Peabody visits within 2–3 business days.
Free estimates in Peabody
Let’s talk about your Peabody project
One contractor, start to finish — quoted, permitted, and built by the same person. Call or request an estimate and we’ll come take a look.
AB Mendez Masonry & Landscaping · Licensed & Insured · Serving Peabody & the North Shore
North Shore service area

