Tysons Modern Living in Northern Virginiaβs Hub
Tysons has evolved from a suburban office park into a walkable urban center with luxury townhomes, mixed-use developments, and established single-family neighborhoods. Deck projects here range from sleek, compact rooftop terraces on new construction to full-size outdoor living expansions on established properties near Tysons Corner.
- Modern aesthetic: Clean lines, aluminum or cable railings, dark composite colors (Lava Rock, Dark Hickory) matching Tysons' contemporary architecture
- Townhome specialists: Compact 150-300 sqft builds that maximize small rear yards and rooftop spaces
- High-rise adjacent: We work with HOAs and management companies in Tysons' newer communities
- Fairfax County permitting: Full permit guide
The two Tysons deck markets we serve
Tysons isn't one market β it's two, and they call for different design vocabularies, permit paths, and price points. Understanding which Tysons you live in is the difference between a 9-week build and a 14-week one.
The Tysons urban core β The Boro, One Park Crest, Ovation at Park Crest, and the newer Metro-oriented mixed-use blocks β is dense, vertical, and architecturally contemporary. Projects here are compact (150β300 sqft), often involve rooftop terraces or balcony rebuilds, and require coordination with professional management firms like FirstService Residential. Material specifications skew dark and modern (Lava Rock, Dark Hickory, Vintage Mahogany), railings are almost always black aluminum or cable, and lighting is integrated into the deck itself. Architectural Review approvals typically take 2β4 weeks.
The single-family Tysons β Pimmit Hills, Old Courthouse, the Westgate Elementary area β sits just outside the Beltway ring around Tysons Corner Center. These are 1950s-era ranches, expanded Cape Cods, and a growing inventory of new-construction Contemporary and Craftsman townhomes on quarter to one-third acre lots. Pimmit Hills has no mandatory HOA, which is a major reason it's our highest-volume single-family neighborhood in the Tysons area. Projects here look more like Vienna or McLean builds: 350β600 sqft rear decks, screened porches added to homes that originally had none, and full outdoor-living layouts.
Tysons neighborhoods we serve
Pimmit Hills
Established in 1950 as a subdivision for World War II and Korean War veterans, Pimmit Hills is one of the closest residential neighborhoods to Tysons Corner Center. Single-family homes here typically sit on quarter to one-third acre lots, ranging from original 50s-era two-bed Cape Cods (often under 1,000 sqft) to newer Craftsman and Traditional rebuilds at $850kβ$2M. There is no mandatory HOA β homeowners can ship a permitted deck project on a faster timeline than almost any other Tysons-adjacent neighborhood. Our most common Pimmit Hills builds: 400β550 sqft rear composite decks with screened porches, full outdoor kitchens on the half-acre lots, and deck-plus-paver-patio combos that extend usable yard space toward mature tree lines.
Old Courthouse
Tucked between Tysons and Vienna, Old Courthouse is a popular established neighborhood with easy Metro access. Lots are larger than the Tysons urban core but smaller than Pimmit Hills. Old Courthouse homeowners typically request mid-tier composite decks ($35kβ$55k range), full pergola-and-pavers combinations, and screened porches that complement the area's mature landscape. HOA structures vary block by block.
The Boro & the Tysons urban core
The Boro is a Meridian Group-developed mixed-use neighborhood with roughly 700 residential units, 500,000 sqft of office, and 250,000 sqft of retail anchored at Greensboro Drive. Townhome and condo residents call us for compact rear decks (often under 250 sqft), rooftop terrace builds, and balcony rebuilds. One Park Crest (the 19-story, 335-unit condo) and Ovation at Park Crest similarly drive demand for elevated terrace work. All Tysons-core projects require Architectural Review through the building's management firm in addition to the Fairfax County building permit.
Westgate Elementary area & perimeter
The blocks served by Westgate Elementary and Lemon Road Elementary form a family-oriented perimeter ring west and south of Tysons Corner Center. These are mid-century single-family homes with the same deck-expansion patterns as Pimmit Hills β full rear decks, screened porches, and the occasional second-story deck off of an addition.
Materials & pricing for Tysons projects
Tysons pricing breaks along the same two-market line as the geography. Compact urban-core projects favor premium PVC (lower expansion, better high-rise temperature behavior); Pimmit Hills and Old Courthouse projects typically use mid-to-premium composite.
| Project type | Typical size | Material | Price range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tysons-core townhome deck | 150β250 sqft | TimberTech AZEK or Trex Transcend | $18,000β$30,000 |
| Rooftop terrace / balcony rebuild | 200β400 sqft | AZEK pedestal or aluminum frame | $28,000β$58,000 |
| Pimmit Hills full rear deck | 400β550 sqft | Trex Transcend or TimberTech PRO | $32,000β$52,000 |
| Pimmit Hills screened porch | 250β350 sqft | Composite + screen system + roof | $48,000β$78,000 |
| Old Courthouse multi-level deck | 500β700 sqft | TimberTech PRO Legacy or AZEK Vintage | $52,000β$85,000 |
Every Tysons estimate includes free 3D design rendering before contract β you see photorealistic views of the finished deck from multiple angles, not generic βstarting atβ pricing. Need to spread the cost? Deck financing options may be available, subject to approval and provider terms.
Permits & HOA approval for Tysons
Tysons sits within the Fairfax County Planned Tysons Corner (PTC) District β a special zoning overlay created to implement the Tysons Comprehensive Plan's vision of a walkable urban center. For most residential deck projects, the PTC overlay means coordinating the Fairfax County building permit (Section 5100 of the Zoning Ordinance covers deck setback rules and Table 5100.1 lists allowed extensions into setbacks) with any community-specific design controls.
- Fairfax County permit: Plan review takes 3β6 weeks. Online via the Department of Land Development Services portal. Permit fees are based on construction valuation. Inspections required at footing, framing, and final.
- HOA / condo association approval: Tysons-core communities (The Boro, One Park Crest, Ovation, Lerner townhomes) typically require material samples, color specs, and engineered drawings. Approval averages 2β4 weeks via FirstService Residential or the building's in-house management.
- Pimmit Hills: No mandatory HOA. Only the Fairfax County permit applies, which is one reason Pimmit Hills projects move 3β4 weeks faster than Tysons-core builds.
- We file both packages in parallel from the day you sign β saving 4β6 weeks compared to builders who serialize the county and HOA submissions.
Full county-specific walkthrough: Fairfax County deck permit guide.
Featured Tysons Project
$28,000 220 sqft Modern Townhome Deck, The Boro
Compact but stunning: TimberTech AZEK deck in Coastline (light beach tone) with black aluminum cable railings, flush-mount LED deck lights, and integrated planter boxes. Designed for a rear-facing townhome with limited space. Fairfax County permit. HOA managed by FirstService approved in 2 weeks. 2-week build.
Why Tysons homeowners choose Loudoun Decks
- Trex Platinum Partner β top 1% of national Trex dealers. Material allocation priority and dealer-only color access.
- TimberTech Certified Installer β manufacturer-trained on PVC pedestal systems used in Tysons-core rooftop projects.
- VA Class A Contractor License + BBB A-rated + NADRA member β every Tysons HOA approval packet ships with verified credentials.
- In-house crews β no subcontractors on Tysons builds. Same team from demo to final walkthrough.
- 2-year workmanship warranty on top of the manufacturer's 25β50 year material warranty.
FAQ β building a deck in Tysons
Can you build a deck on a Tysons townhome?
Yes. Many newer Tysons townhomes have small rear yards or rooftop terraces that are perfect for compact composite decks (150-300 sqft). We design space-efficient outdoor living that maximizes smaller Tysons lots.
How much does a deck cost in Tysons?
Tysons deck projects range from $18,000-$78,000+ depending on location and scope. Compact townhome decks: $18k-$30k. Rooftop terraces: $28k-$58k. Pimmit Hills full-rear decks: $32k-$52k. Old Courthouse multi-level: $52k-$85k. Pimmit Hills screened porches: $48k-$78k.
Which Tysons neighborhoods do you serve most often?
Our largest single-family-home volume in the Tysons area comes from Pimmit Hills (no mandatory HOA), Old Courthouse between Tysons and Vienna, and the Westgate Elementary area. Our compact-deck work concentrates in The Boro, One Park Crest, and Ovation at Park Crest.
Do I need a deck permit in Tysons? What's the Fairfax County process?
Yes for any deck attached to your house, over 256 sqft, or more than 16.5 inches above grade. Fairfax County deck construction is regulated by setback Table 5100.1 in the Zoning Ordinance. Within the Tysons Urban Center, the Planned Tysons Corner (PTC) District adds Comprehensive Plan design overlays. Permit Application Center 703-222-0801; review averages 3-6 weeks.
What about HOA approval for Tysons condos and townhomes?
Most Tysons-core communities (The Boro, One Park Crest, Ovation at Park Crest, Lerner-built townhomes) are managed by firms like FirstService Residential. Architectural Review typically takes 2-4 weeks once we submit material samples, renderings, and structural drawings. Pimmit Hills single-family homes have no mandatory HOA.
What materials work best for the Tysons modern aesthetic?
Dark composite colors (Trex Transcend Lava Rock, TimberTech AZEK Dark Hickory, Vintage Mahogany), black or bronze aluminum cable railings, integrated low-voltage LED lighting. For light/coastal contrast: TimberTech AZEK Coastline or Trex Transcend Tiki Torch. PVC (AZEK) outperforms composite on south-facing rooftop terraces.
Do you build rooftop terraces and balcony decks in Tysons?
Yes. Rooftop terraces and elevated balcony rebuilds are common in Tysons-core townhomes. These require structural load review (often engineer-stamped), waterproof membrane coordination, 42-inch guardrails, and association approval. AZEK or aluminum pedestal systems are typical.
How long does a Tysons deck project take from contract to walkthrough?
8-12 weeks total. That includes 3-4 weeks for Fairfax County permit, 2-4 weeks for HOA approval (parallel with permit), 1-3 weeks for material delivery, and 1-3 weeks for construction. Compact townhome decks: 9-10 weeks. Pimmit Hills full-rear decks: 10-12 weeks.
Can homeowners in Pimmit Hills add screened porches?
Yes β and it's one of the most popular Pimmit Hills upgrades because the 1950s ranches originally had no rear outdoor living space. Quarter-acre lots with mature trees make screened porches especially valuable here. Typical Pimmit Hills screened porches: $48,000-$78,000 including foundation, decking, screen, roof, and electric.



