The driveway is the first 30 feet of the property.
A stone driveway apron, matching gateposts, low entry walls, integrated lighting. The first impression of a house, designed and built with the same care as the rest of the landscape.
— Why most driveway transitions feel cheap
Asphalt meets road. Period.
Most driveways have no transition feature at the road. The asphalt or gravel runs right up to the public way, with maybe a mailbox post. The opportunity for a signal of arrival, of care, of the property’s character, is wasted.
No defined entry.
Driveway just ends at the road. No visual signal of arrival. The property feels less curated than it is.
Aprons that crack and heave.
Concrete aprons poured without proper base, frost-heave at the edge of every winter. Visible damage at the most-photographed part of the property.
Mismatched materials.
Cobblestone apron at the road, asphalt driveway behind. Reads as a tacked-on feature rather than an integrated entry.
Gateposts that don’t relate to the house.
Pre-fab columns from a big-box catalog. They look mass-produced because they are.
— Entry features, by the numbers
— What’s included
An entry that introduces the property.
Whether a simple apron or a complete entry feature with gateposts, lighting, and signage, every project follows the same care.
Stone driveway apron
Bluestone, granite, or cobblestone apron at the road edge. Sized for the driveway width and the house scale.
Apron drainage
French drain or surface swale at the apron-to-asphalt transition to prevent ice buildup at the road edge.
Gateposts
Stacked or mortared stone gateposts, sized to the property scale. Cap stones with proper drip edge.
Low entry walls
Optional dry-laid or mortared walls flanking the driveway entry, often integrated with planting beds.
Integrated lighting
Low-voltage gatepost lighting and/or apron uplighting, dark-sky compliant, on dusk-to-dawn or smart timer.
Address numbers
Hand-cast bronze or routed stone address numbers integrated into gatepost or wall.
Two-winter inspection
Spring of years one and two, we walk the entry, check joints and footing, no charge.
— How an entry gets built
Four steps. Four to eight weeks.
Most entry features install in 1–2 weeks of working time. Total project timeline 4–8 weeks.
Site visit
Two-hour walk with the architect. We listen, you talk. We measure light, slope, drainage, and existing material. No PowerPoint.
Design
Hand-drawn schematic, then full construction documents. Material specs, sections, footing detail. Two reviews built in.
Quote
Fixed-price proposal, line-itemed by trade. You see the math. Change orders signed before any change happens.
Build
Our in-house crew, on site every working day. Weekly progress photos. Architect at every milestone. We don’t leave until punch list is empty.
— Recent entry work
Three recent driveway projects.
Lakefront master plan, 2½ acres.
Three terraced rooms stepping down to Lake Champlain. 240 ft of dry-laid stone wall, cedar pavilion, native pollinator beds.
Read project →Seven-terrace hilltop garden.
Re-grading a north-facing slope into seven dry-stone-walled terraces of perennials, fruit trees, and a 60-foot meditation walk.
Read project →1,400 sq ft contemporary courtyard.
Bluestone paving, cedar slat screening, a small reflecting pool, and three Japanese maples for autumn color.
Read project →Stone apron at road, no gateposts
$8K–$22Ktypical install
A stone or paver driveway apron 12–20 ft wide, with proper drainage and frost-line edge footing.
Apron + gateposts + lighting + entry walls
$22K–$80Kcomplete scope
Integrated entry feature with stone apron, matching gateposts, optional flanking walls, lighting, and address signage.
— Driveway entry questions
What clients ask.
Do I need town approval for the apron at the road?
Often yes — the apron at the public road typically requires a curb-cut or driveway entry permit. We handle the permit application and coordinate with the town highway department.
Will the apron crack at the asphalt joint?
If the apron is built properly (frost-line edge footing, expansion joint at the asphalt transition, drainage), it shouldn’t. We use a flexible joint at the transition and design the apron to accept slight differential settlement of the asphalt without telegraphing through to the stone.
Can you match an existing house material?
Often yes. If your house has a stone foundation or stone chimney in a regional stone (schist, granite, fieldstone), we can match the gatepost and entry wall material to it. Send photos during the site visit.
What about the mailbox?
Often integrated into the gatepost or wall — a mortared stone mailbox column with a brass plaque, or a cleat-mounted mailbox on a stone wall, is far more elegant than a wood post in the lawn.
Do you do automatic gates?
We build the cedar or steel gate and the stone columns. The automation (motors, electronics, intercom, smart-lock) we coordinate with a low-voltage installer who comes in after our construction.