Most outdoor spaces look fine. A deck. A set of chairs. Maybe a string of lights someone put up a few summers ago.
But there’s a difference between an outdoor space that exists and one that becomes part of how you actually live. The difference isn’t the budget. It’s the decisions made before a single board gets laid.
In this blog:

The most important design conversation isn’t about materials or finishes. It’s about function.
Do you host or want somewhere quiet to start the morning? Maybe you have kids and dogs who need room to run or a view you want to protect? Those answers narrow everything down: layout, materials, lighting, storage. They make every selection easier. Dierdre, our design supervisor, says that when a homeowner comes in with a clear end goal, “whether it’s storage, view, family time, or pet play, having a goal makes narrowing down their space and material selection easy for your designer.”
One detail worth thinking about early is storage. Something as straightforward as a bench with built-in storage pulls double duty: extra seating for guests and a home for everything the backyard actually needs. That’s what intentional design looks like: function and form working together from the start.

A well-designed outdoor space shouldn’t stop working when the sun goes down. But for a lot of homeowners, that’s exactly what happens because lighting was treated as an afterthought.
Dierdre sees it often: “Lighting is one of the strongest factors in whether homeowners actually use their outdoor spaces after dark, and a couple of soffit lights won’t cut it for a late-night swim or a backyard BBQ that runs past dusk.”

1. Composite Decking: The Case for Longevity
In Eastern Ontario’s climate, wood decking takes a beating. Freeze-thaw cycles, rain, humidity. Over time, untreated wood greys out, warps, and starts to break down. It’s not a question of if; it’s when. Dierdre puts it straightforwardly, “The weather eats away at wood over time, making it turn grey and rot, especially with Ottawa’s winters and rain. Composite just isn’t affected the same way. It holds up and keeps looking new far longer.”
The best thing about a composite deck isn’t how it looks on day one. It’s how it looks five years in.
2. Railing: The Choice Is More Personal Than You Think
Railing selection comes down to how you actually use the space: whether you’re protecting a view of the Ottawa or St. Lawrence River, adding privacy from close neighbours, or thinking about how a surface will hold up after a week of kids and dogs.
The best railing is the one designed around your space and the people in it.
One pairing Dierdre keeps coming back to is a warm wood-grain composite deck with a black aluminum railing. It works across both modern and contemporary homes and balances warmth with durability, two things Ottawa homeowners consistently prioritize.
A space designed around how you live doesn’t just look better. It gets used more. It becomes the spot guests drift toward, the place you end up on a Tuesday evening without really planning to.
If you’re thinking about an outdoor project this season, our Home Care team is a great place to start. Whether you’re ready to build or still figuring out what you want, we’ll walk through your space with you and help you make sense of what’s possible for your yard, your lifestyle, and your budget.