Resort-style pool and outdoor living space, designed and built by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape in Church Point, Acadiana
Landscape Design & Build · Church Point, LA

Luxury Landscape Design
in Church Point
HOA-Ready Outdoor Living, Engineered to Last

Quick Answer

Who is the best landscape design-build contractor in Church Point?

Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape is a fully licensed Louisiana design-build firm (LSLBC #2600441 (placeholder)) specializing in luxury outdoor living for Church Point, from the view estates of Plaisance to the newer master-planned luxury of the 70525 belt. With 2,900+ completed projects, we design for this area's realities: heavy HOA architectural review, a hot inland climate, hillside and sandy lots, and wildfire rules on the fire-prone fringe. One team handles design, HOA submittals, permitting, and construction across every Church Point community.

Outdoor Living in Church Point

Landscape design built
for Church Point

Church Point is one of Rayne's most established and most governed communities. Nearly every neighborhood here sits under a community association with its own architectural review committee, and those rules on walls, view corridors, materials, and plant palettes shape a project long before a City permit is filed. Getting a luxury outdoor space approved and built here is as much about navigating that review as it is about design.

As a true design-build firm, we handle every phase under one roof: site assessment, 3D design, HOA architectural submittals, structural and geotechnical engineering, City permitting, and construction. That single source of accountability matters in Church Point, where a hillside project can involve HOA design review, view-preservation rules, grading, sandy and clay soils, and defensible space all at once. Coordinating that across separate contractors is where most projects stall.

From resort pools and full outdoor kitchens on Plaisance view lots to low-maintenance, refined landscapes in the area's 55-plus communities, we build for a wide range of Church Point homeowners. Every material, plant, and detail is specified for hot inland summers, the local soils, and the design guidelines your specific association enforces.


Building in Church Point

What makes a Church Point project different

01

HOA architectural review comes first

Church Point is one of Rayne's most HOA-governed areas. Associations like Plaisance, Seven Oaks, Oaks North, and the master-planned communities of the 70525 belt each run their own architectural review committee with distinct rules. Approval there is usually the gatekeeping step before a City permit is worth filing. We prepare the elevations, material and color selections, wall and fence heights, and plant lists these committees require, and manage the submittal.

02

View preservation on hillside lots

Much of Church Point is rolling hills, and view-corridor preservation is a recurring approval issue in the view and golf-course enclaves. We design pools, shade structures, and planting so they respect neighbors' sightlines and the association's view rules, which is often the difference between a smooth approval and a redesign.

03

Wildfire and defensible space

Inland northeast Rayne is fire country. The 2023 wildfires tore through Church Point, and hillside and canyon-edge lots frequently fall in a state-designated high fire-risk zone. Where that applies, we design defensible space out to 100 feet and a non-combustible Zone 0 in the first 5 feet around the home, so the landscape is a buffer as well as a place to live.

04

Sandy and clay soils

The sandy hills here shed decomposed granite that drains fast but erodes on slopes, while expansive clay shows up in the broader foothill band and can heave footings, pool shells, and flatwork. We start with a soils report, then engineer footings, retaining walls, drainage, and erosion control to match the ground your lot actually has.

05

Designed for inland heat

Church Point summers run hot and dry, with heat waves pushing well into the 90s. We design for that with shade structures, pools and spas built for real use, and planting and irrigation tuned to the heat, so the yard is comfortable through a long, warm season rather than just for mild days.

06

Established homes and newer luxury

Church Point spans established 1960s to 1980s homes, many rebuilt after the 2007 fire, and the newer master-planned luxury of Lawtell, Port Barre, Bocage, and Grand Prairie in the 70525 belt. We tailor the approach to each, from respectful renovation of a mature lot to a full build behind the strict design guidelines of a newer gated community.

Neighborhoods We Serve

Every corner of Church Point

Plaisance

Church Point's premier luxury enclave, with larger custom-home lots, panoramic views, and resort-style expectations. Governed by its own architectural review, and prime for pools, outdoor kitchens, and view-conscious design.

Westwood

The heart of family Church Point, tree-lined and strongly HOA-governed on established mid-size lots. A steady market for pool, turf, and hardscape refreshes.

The Trails

An established neighborhood on the hillier, fire-adjacent fringe, hard hit by the 2023 wildfires and largely rebuilt. Fire-smart, defensible landscaping is especially relevant here.

Seven Oaks

One of the original 55-plus communities, with moderate lots and an active association. Accessible, low-maintenance, aging-in-place landscape design that still feels refined.

Oaks North

An age-restricted 55-plus community beside the Oaks North golf course. A retiree market for low-maintenance and view-oriented outdoor spaces.

Country Club & Church Point Estates

Established estate pockets around the Church Point Inn and golf frontage, with larger lots and course or view exposure. Strong candidates for high-end hardscape and pools.

High Country West

An established single-family HOA neighborhood with hillier western pockets, slopes, and views. Terracing and retaining work often unlock the usable outdoor space here.

Greater Church Point · 70525 luxury belt

The newer master-planned communities west of I-49, including Lawtell, Port Barre, Bocage, and Grand Prairie. Gated, design-guideline-heavy, and top-tier for custom pools and landscapes.

Portfolio

Outdoor living across Church Point

Resort-style pool and spa by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape in Church Point
Pool and outdoor living space by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape in Church Point
Estate patio and pool by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape in Church Point
Pool with a raised spa by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape in Church Point
Drought-tolerant planting and hardscape by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape in Church Point
Outdoor kitchen and patio by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape in Church Point
Common Questions

Landscape Design and Build in Church Point

Almost certainly. Church Point is one of Rayne's most HOA-governed areas, and most enclaves, from Plaisance to Seven Oaks, Oaks North, and the newer 70525 communities, run their own architectural review committee with its own rules on setbacks, wall and fence heights, materials, colors, view preservation, and approved plants. That approval is usually the gatekeeping step before a City permit is even worth filing. We prepare the documented submittal each committee asks for and manage the review so your project clears it cleanly.

Parts of it are. The 2023 wildfires jumped I-49 and destroyed hundreds of homes in Church Point, and hillside and canyon-edge lots here often fall within a state-designated high fire-risk zone, though not every lot does. Where it applies, state law and City of Rayne brush management require defensible space out to 100 feet, and Louisiana's new Zone 0 rule requires the first 5 feet around the home to be non-combustible. We check your specific parcel and design the landscape to be both fire-smart and HOA-compliant at the same time.

Yes, and much of Church Point is exactly that kind of terrain. Sloped and view lots need geotechnical evaluation for the sandy and clay soils, retaining walls and terracing to create a level pad, and drainage and erosion control designed for the grade. On top of the engineering, the association's view-preservation rules shape how tall and where we can build. We handle both, so the finished pool and patio are stable, usable, and approved.

The drivers are a hot, dry inland climate, water efficiency, and your association's approved plant list. We design drought-tolerant, climate-appropriate palettes under Louisiana's water-efficiency ordinance, pairing efficient drip irrigation and hydrozoning with species that handle inland heat: succulents and agaves, salvias, yaupon holly, dwarf palmetto, ornamental grasses, and accent trees like fruitless olive. On fire-zone lots we lean on low-fuel selections and keep the ember zone non-combustible. Every plan is checked against the specific HOA list before we spec it.

Yes. The master-planned communities west of I-49 in the 70525 area, including Lawtell, Port Barre, Bocage, and Grand Prairie, are part of the greater Church Point luxury market and a core part of what we build. These communities carry some of the strictest design guidelines in the parish, and our design-build process is built to document and clear that review while delivering a genuinely custom outdoor space.

Construction typically runs about 10 to 16 weeks, but the front end here can add time. HOA architectural review, City permitting, and any grading or hillside review all happen before construction begins, and busy association calendars can stretch the approval phase. We give you a realistic, parcel-specific timeline at the design stage that accounts for your association's process, rather than an optimistic estimate that ignores it.

Get Started

Transform your
Church Point property

Schedule your complimentary design consultation. We'll visit your property, walk your space, and show you exactly what's possible.