
Project work photos
Fence Installation And Sitework Photo Examples
These KY Fencing Works work photos show wood privacy fence work and nearby grading or yard conditions that can support fence project planning.
Use these photos to compare access, slope, drainage, material, cleanup, and handoff needs before requesting an estimate.
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Example photos of our work
Fence Installation And Sitework work photos
These are example photos from KY Fencing Works work. They show the kind of site conditions, equipment access, material movement, drainage details, grading, hauling, fencing, digging, and support work we handle.
Every property is different. Use these photos as a general reference, then send your own current photos with the estimate request so we can look at the actual access, slope, water, material, nearby structures, and cleanup needs on your site.
Work category
Fence Installation And Sitework is the service category shown in this gallery. Use it to decide whether your project is closest to this kind of work or whether another project-photo category fits better.
Current condition
If your property has a before condition, send fresh photos of that condition. These gallery photos are real work examples, not paired before-and-after promises.
Estimate context
Photos are most useful when they show the entrance, work area, nearby structures, water movement, material, cleanup area, and what should happen next.
Photo 1
wood privacy fence installation example
Photo 2
backyard wood privacy fence
Photo 3
finished privacy fence and grading example
What we do for this type of work
The photos on this page are real work examples from KY Fencing Works. They show the kind of conditions we look at when planning excavation, grading, drainage, hauling, driveway work, fencing support, demolition support, and other sitework.
Use them for a quick gut check. If your property has similar access, slope, water, gravel, trenching, debris, pad prep, fence line, driveway, or equipment-room issues, send us the details and a few current photos.
Work shown
Wood privacy fence installation, finished fence, and grading-adjacent yard context are visible.
Planning details
Fence work planning usually depends on line access, grade, removals, post locations, and cleanup.
Good to know
Useful estimate notes include fence length, material goal, gates, grade changes, and any tight access.
What to send with your estimate request
A useful estimate request can be simple. Tell us where the work is, what needs to change, how trucks or equipment can reach it, and whether dirt, rock, gravel, brush, concrete, water, or debris needs to be moved, shaped, or hauled away.
Photos help most when they show the whole area and the problem up close. Send a wide shot from the driveway or access point, a closer photo of the work area, and any notes about gates, soft ground, trees, utilities, nearby buildings, drainage, or another contractor who needs the area ready.
You do not need to write a long project description. A few clear photos, the property location, the service you think you need, the result you are trying to get, and any tight access or handoff timing are enough to start the conversation.
Show the work area
Take one wide photo and one close photo so we can see both the layout and the condition that needs work.
Show access
Include gates, driveway width, slopes, soft ground, trees, tight turns, and where equipment or trucks would enter.
Tell us the goal
Say whether the area needs better drainage, a driveway repair, a prepared pad, a clean dig-out, a fence line, hauling, or cleanup.
Use the gallery like a practical proof checklist
The strongest photo proof is specific. A good gallery does not just show equipment; it shows the surface, access, material, grade, drainage, edges, cleanup area, and the kind of handoff the property may need next.
When you compare these examples to your own property, look for what is visible and what still needs explanation. A driveway photo may show gravel and grade, but your request should still explain the soft spots, traffic use, drainage concern, and where material can be placed.
Before condition
Send the current problem: water, ruts, brush, rock, debris, soft ground, blocked access, exposed foundation, or an area that is not ready for the next step.
Work area
Show where equipment can enter, where material can be staged, and what nearby buildings, fences, trees, slopes, or utilities could affect the job.
Desired handoff
Explain whether the area should be contractor-ready, graveled, rough graded, cleaned up, opened for access, or prepared for another phase.
Plan around your actual site
The photos are useful starting points, but the estimate still depends on the real property. Access, slope, water, utilities, structures, material, and cleanup can change the plan from one job to the next.
Photos are examples. The right plan depends on the actual access, material, slope, water, cleanup, and handoff needs at your property.
Photos of our work
The images are here to show real work examples and the kinds of jobsite conditions we handle.
Every site is different
Your estimate still depends on the actual access, slope, material, water, structures, and handoff needs at your property.
Send current photos
Fresh photos from your property help us compare the example work to the condition you need handled now.
Request an estimate
Need a project like this reviewed?
Use the estimate form with the property location, current photos, what needs to change, and any access, drainage, material, or handoff notes that matter.
