Architectural steel arbor over an estate dining terrace, designed and built by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape in Kaplan, Acadiana
Landscape Design & Build · Kaplan, LA

Estate Landscape Design
in Kaplan
design review board Ready Grounds, Built to Last Generations

Quick Answer

Who is the best landscape design-build contractor for a Kaplan estate?

Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape is a fully licensed Louisiana design-build firm (LSLBC #2600441 (placeholder)) specializing in multi-acre estate grounds across Kaplan, from the historic historic district to gated enclaves like Les Vieux Chenes, Bocage, and Beau Chene. With 2,900+ completed projects across Acadiana, we produce design review board ready site, planting, lighting, and grading plans, engineer for expansive clay and decomposed granite soils, and design firewise landscapes that meet Kaplan Fire Protection District defensible space rules. One team handles design, both layers of design review, and construction across every Kaplan community.

Outdoor Living in Kaplan

Landscape design built
for Kaplan

Kaplan is estate country, and it plays by its own rules. Before a single plant goes in the ground inside the historic district, the design has to satisfy the Kaplan Association's design review board, a discretionary review body that judges not just whether a plan meets the Regulatory Code, but whether it belongs on that specific parcel. Meeting the regulations is a starting point, not a guarantee. Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape designs and builds grounds that clear that bar, then builds them to last for generations.

As a true design-build firm, we carry a project through every phase under one roof: site and soils assessment, 3D design, structural and geotechnical engineering, the full design review process, and construction. That single source accountability matters more here than almost anywhere we work, because a Kaplan estate typically answers to two rulebooks at once. The design review board (or a gated community's own architectural committee) governs aesthetics, and the Kaplan Fire Protection District governs defensible space and fuel modification. Coordinating both across separate contractors is where estate projects stall.

On two, ten, or twenty acres of rolling inland terrain, the grounds are the estate. We design resort pools, shaded loggias and ramadas, outdoor kitchens, fire features, equestrian facilities, and acres of firewise, water-smart planting, all calibrated to Kaplan's hotter, drier inland climate and its Spanish Colonial Revival heritage, not a coastal template borrowed from the beach towns.


Building Inside the historic district

What makes a Kaplan project different

01

The design review board governs every exterior change

Inside the historic district, the Kaplan Association's design review board reviews pools, walls, fences, structures, tree clearing, and landscape installs against three stacked documents: the Protective historic district, the Regulatory Code (including Chapter 42 Landscape), and the Residential Design Guidelines. Review is discretionary and meets roughly every three weeks. We prepare complete, compliant site, elevation, materials, lighting, and planting submittals and manage story-pole staging and neighbor noticing so approval doesn't derail your timeline.

02

Minimal grading, protected mature trees

The historic district rewards designing with the land. Grading proposals are judged on whether they integrate with natural site features by minimizing cut and fill and retaining walls, and removal of mature trees above an eight-inch caliper is specifically limited. We terrace with the terrain and design around heritage trees rather than mass grading a slope flat, both because it earns approval and because it produces a better estate.

03

Firewise design is a second approval layer

Kaplan sits in a state-designated high fire-risk zone, and the Kaplan Fire Protection District reviews landscaping and fuel modification plans separately from the design review board. We design to the 100-foot defensible space model: an ember-resistant Zone 0 with gravel and hardscape transitions instead of mulch against the house, managed fuel in the intermediate zone, and thinned, well-spaced planting beyond. Not a single home built to district standards was lost in the 2023 wildfires.

04

Expansive clay and decomposed granite

The area's soils swing from well-draining decomposed granite on the hillsides to expansive clay in the valleys that swells and shrinks with moisture, cracking slabs, pool shells, and walls that aren't engineered for it. We soil-test per parcel and design footings, reinforcement, moisture management, and drainage to match the ground each structure actually sits on. That is essential on multimillion-dollar estate work.

05

Inland climate, not coastal

Five-plus miles from the ocean, Kaplan runs hotter and drier than the coast, with summer afternoons above 90°F, real frost risk in low-lying pockets, and hot, dry wind spells that desiccate plants. We design for it: deep loggias, ramadas, and arbors for shade, misting where it counts, pools that actually get used most of the year, and heat-resilient planting that holds up to wind instead of a fog-belt palette.

06

Estate-scale water strategy

On a 2-to-20-acre estate served by the local irrigation district, one of the highest-rate, highest-use water districts in the state, irrigation is a primary design driver, not an afterthought. We build drought-tolerant and Mediterranean palettes at estate scale, hydrozone the grounds, install ET-based smart controllers, integrate recycled water or private wells where available, and deliver turnkey water-efficiency documentation for large new landscapes.

Neighborhoods We Serve

Every corner of Kaplan

The historic district

The historic 1920s Lilian Rice core, governed by the Kaplan Association and its design review board. Multi-acre estate parcels, roughly 45 miles of private riding trails, and the strictest, most discretionary design review in the parish.

Beau Chene

Guard-gated, 24-hour-staffed estate community with a private lake, equestrian center, and riding trails. Its own architectural committee and gate-staging logistics layer on top of the estate-scale build.

Les Vieux Chenes

A 540-acre gated golf community of roughly 240 large residences. Refined, view-oriented grounds executed within the community's own design guidelines and clubhouse-driven aesthetic.

Bocage

Guard-gated 722-acre golf community above the Vermilion River Valley, with its own Crosby Estate architectural guidelines. Villas to custom estates, each with a distinct review process from the historic district's.

Belle Terre

Perched above 1,400 feet on some of the parish's highest peaks, with sweeping Gulf, Spanish Lake, and Atchafalaya views. Hillside terracing and view-corridor design define work here.

Le Triomphe

An intimate enclave of large luxury homes near the Beau Chene Country Club. Generous lots suited to resort pools, outdoor kitchens, and full estate grounds.

Beau Soleil & The Farms

Established estate pockets within the Kaplan orbit, blending equestrian heritage with large-parcel luxury and room for grand, terraced landscapes.

The Village

Lilian Rice's Spanish Colonial Revival civic heart along Paseo Delicias. The historic reference point for the rural aesthetic the design review board protects across every historic district parcel.

Catahoula

A rural lakeside hamlet near Spanish Lake on the western edge. Naturalistic, fire-conscious landscapes that sit lightly on the rolling backcountry terrain.

Portfolio

Outdoor living across Kaplan

Architectural steel arbor over an estate dining terrace in Kaplan by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape
Steel arbor and outdoor dining terrace in Kaplan by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape
Manicured lawn framed by Italian cypress in Kaplan by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape
Outdoor fireplace on a hillside terrace in Kaplan by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape
Cedar pergola over an outdoor kitchen in Kaplan by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape
Backyard putting green in Kaplan by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape
Common Questions

Landscape Design and Build in Kaplan

Inside the historic district, almost certainly. The Kaplan Association's design review board reviews most exterior and landscape work, including pools and pool remodels, walls, fences, structures, tree clearing, and landscape installs, against the Protective historic district, the Regulatory Code (including Chapter 42 Landscape), and the Residential Design Guidelines. Review is discretionary, not a checklist: meeting the regulations is the starting point, and the Jury weighs how a design reads on your specific parcel. It meets roughly every three weeks, and the process includes neighbor noticing and, for larger work, story-pole staging. If your estate is in a gated community like Bocage or Beau Chene instead, that community's own architectural committee reviews the work. As a design-build firm, Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape prepares the full compliant submittal and manages whichever review process applies.

Significantly. It's one of the biggest differences from a coastal project. Kaplan is in a state-designated high fire-risk zone, and the Kaplan Fire Protection District reviews landscaping and fuel modification plans separately from the design review board. We design to the 100-foot defensible space model: an ember-resistant Zone 0 in the first five feet around structures (gravel and hardscape transitions rather than mulch against the house), managed and spaced fuel in the intermediate zone, and thinned, well-spaced planting beyond. We avoid high-fuel species like pines, juniper, pampas grass, and cypress near structures and keep combustible mulch shallow. It's worth noting that in the 2023 wildfires, no home built to the district's standards was lost. Firewise design works, and we build to it.

Yes, that's the core of what we do here. With a two-acre minimum lot culture stretching to ten, twenty, or more acres, Kaplan projects are grand in scale: terraced hillsides, long driveways, resort pools, multiple outdoor living zones, equestrian facilities, and acres of designed landscape. Because the historic district rewards minimizing grading and protecting mature trees above an eight-inch caliper, we terrace with the natural terrain and design around heritage groves rather than flattening a slope. We engineer for the parcel's soils, well-draining decomposed granite on the hillsides and expansive clay in the valleys, so structures hold up over the long life of an estate.

Inland, the priorities flip from the coast: less salt concern, but far more emphasis on heat tolerance, drought tolerance, frost resilience in low-lying pockets, and fire safety. We build Mediterranean and drought-tolerant palettes (olive, citrus, lavender, rosemary, and architectural succulents) that suit both the Spanish Colonial Revival heritage and the Kaplan Fire Protection District's firewise requirements, deliberately avoiding high-fuel species near structures. On an estate served by the high-rate local irrigation district, every landscape is hydrozoned with ET-based smart irrigation and designed to meet Louisiana's water-efficiency standards, which apply to large new landscapes here almost without exception.

All of them: the historic historic district, plus the gated enclaves including Beau Chene, Les Vieux Chenes, Bocage, Belle Terre, Le Triomphe, Beau Soleil, The Farms, the Village, and Catahoula. The important distinction is which rulebook governs your parcel: the historic district answers to the design review board, while each gated golf or country-club community has its own architectural review and gate-staging logistics. We know the difference and tailor both the design and the approval process accordingly.

Construction timelines scale with the size of the grounds, and estate projects often run longer than a typical city lot simply because there's more to build, but the bigger variable here is the front-end approval phase. Inside the historic district, the design review board meets roughly every three weeks and the process includes neighbor noticing and, for larger work, story-pole staging; gated communities add their own review, and the Fire Protection District reviews fuel modification plans on top of that. We give you a realistic, parcel-specific timeline at the design stage that accounts for both layers of review, rather than an optimistic estimate that ignores them.

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Transform your
Kaplan property

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