About This Service
About this Service
Resin bonded aggregate suits tree pits and borders in Longmont's tech campus offices and suburban developments, where St. Vrain Valley soils cause mulch to compact and lawn edges to blur during extended growing seasons. The textured finish coordinates with modern stone and metal common to Hover Street corridors and Main Street commercial areas.
Installation includes protective grids around tree bases and custom aggregate mixes resisting high winds without the heaving common to loose stone on irrigation canal bases. Aggregate layers allow limited water infiltration while holding material in place during runoff from Ken Pratt Boulevard slopes.
Surfaces require no seasonal replacement but may need periodic top-up where foot traffic or milder freeze-thaw cycles loosen aggregate. Borders defining lawn edges in farmstead conversions and suburban tracts stay visible through spring thaws without the erosion typical of organic mulch on St. Vrain Valley soils.