Camarillo Deck & Fence is a deck builder serving Newbury Park, CA, specializing in composite deck installation, custom deck design, and deck and fence work on the ranch homes, hillside properties, and established subdivisions that define Newbury Park's residential character. We have served Ventura County homeowners since 2018 and understand the permit process, HOA requirements, and site conditions specific to this Conejo Valley community.

Most Newbury Park homes were built between the 1960s and 1980s - which means original wood decks added during that era are now 40 to 60 years old, and many are past the point where maintenance makes sense. Composite is the leading replacement choice because it handles the area's hot, dry summers and Santa Ana wind events without warping, fading, or requiring the annual sealing that wood demands in this climate. For hillside properties with complex framing requirements, composite is also easier to cut and work around irregular grades. Explore our full composite deck installation process and material options.
Newbury Park homeowners tend to invest in their properties - home values here are among the higher tier in Ventura County, and most people are building for the long term. A custom deck designed specifically for your property, rather than a standard kit configuration, makes better use of a sloped or irregularly shaped lot and integrates with the home's existing architecture. Ranch homes from the 1960s and 1970s, which are common throughout the area, often have backyard configurations that benefit from a thoughtful layout rather than a default rectangle.
Decks on Newbury Park homes from the 1970s and 1980s have often reached an age where surface replacement is not enough - the substructure, hardware, and ledger connections may be compromised by decades of heat cycling and occasional wet winters. A thorough assessment before any repair work starts is the right approach, because what presents as a cosmetic issue on the boards can indicate a more significant problem in the framing below that needs addressing before new materials are applied on top.
Newbury Park gets hot and dry from late spring through early fall, and without shade, a south or west-facing deck is unusable during the hottest hours of the day. A solid-roof patio cover or lattice structure extends outdoor living time significantly during summer and also shields the deck surface from the UV exposure that accelerates wear on any material, wood or composite. For homes near the Santa Monica Mountains foothills, a cover also provides protection from the debris and embers that fall events can bring.
Newbury Park has a mix of older subdivisions with larger lots and newer HOA communities with specific materials requirements. On older properties, wood privacy fencing is a common choice and works well when properly sealed for the area's dry summers. For HOA properties, we review association guidelines before any material selection to make sure the finished fence meets approval requirements - a step that saves significant back-and-forth later in the project.
A pergola is one of the most popular additions to Newbury Park backyards because it provides partial shade and a defined outdoor structure without blocking the hillside and mountain views that many homes in the area were designed to frame. Cedar pergolas are a particularly good match for the ranch and Spanish-style homes common in the older Newbury Park subdivisions, and they hold up well in this climate with proper finishing at installation.
Most of Newbury Park was built during a 30-year window from roughly 1960 to 1990, and the homes from that period were not designed with today's deck building standards. Ledger connections on older homes - the point where a deck attaches to the house wall - often lack the flashing and hardware required by current code, and stucco exteriors can hide moisture damage at those attachment points that only becomes apparent when the old structure is removed. Any deck replacement or addition on a home from this era should start with an assessment of the attachment zone before any framing begins.
Newbury Park's proximity to the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area adds two conditions that affect material and design choices: wildfire risk and hillside topography. Many properties in Newbury Park sit in a high fire hazard severity zone, which means decking material selection has real implications beyond aesthetics - composite and fire-rated materials are worth discussing with any homeowner in these zones. The sloped lots common near the foothills also require more complex footing placement and beam work than flat urban lots, which affects both the structural engineering and the permit requirements through the City of Thousand Oaks.
Our crew works throughout Newbury Park regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect deck builder work here. We pull permits through the City of Thousand Oaks Community Development Department and are familiar with the plan check process for both the older ranch subdivisions and the newer HOA-managed communities that coexist throughout the area.
Newbury Park sits in the western portion of the Conejo Valley, with the Santa Monica Mountains forming a dramatic backdrop to the south. Borchard Community Park is one of the neighborhood's most visible gathering spots, and the 101 Freeway corridor divides the older, hillside-adjacent neighborhoods from the newer planned communities closer to Thousand Oaks Boulevard. Many homeowners in the older subdivisions near the foothills have large mature trees and tiered yards - we see this regularly and plan deck layouts accordingly.
We also serve homeowners across the surrounding area. If you are in Simi Valley, which borders Newbury Park to the east, or in Thousand Oaks, which surrounds Newbury Park, we cover those communities as well. Reach out by phone or through our estimate form and we will respond within one business day.
Call or submit an estimate form and describe what you have in mind. We respond to all new Newbury Park inquiries within one business day and schedule a site visit promptly - no waiting weeks to hear back.
We visit the property, assess the site - including slope, existing structures, and any HOA constraints - and discuss your goals for the space. The estimate is free and covers materials, labor, permit costs, and a realistic project timeline. For hillside lots or homes with complex ledger attachment points, this visit is especially important for giving you an accurate number upfront.
We handle the permit application through the City of Thousand Oaks, including structural drawings and required inspections. If HOA approval is needed, we can provide the documentation the association typically requests. Construction begins after permit approval - plan check for a standard residential deck usually takes one to three weeks.
We schedule the city inspection, walk through the finished work with you, and close out the project only when everything is right. Most Newbury Park deck projects run four to eight weeks from first contact to completed inspection.
We serve all of Newbury Park and the surrounding Conejo Valley communities. Get a free, no-obligation estimate - we respond within one business day.
(805) 586-6058Newbury Park is one of the main communities that makes up the Conejo Valley, situated within the city of Thousand Oaks in Ventura County. It grew rapidly as a suburb during the 1960s and 1970s, and most of its residential neighborhoods reflect that era - single-story and two-story ranch homes on modest to medium-sized lots, with stucco exteriors, mature landscaping, and backyards that in many cases have not had a major outdoor renovation since the homes were first built. Home values are high relative to the county average, the owner-occupancy rate is strong, and residents here tend to invest in maintaining and improving their properties rather than moving on.
The southern and eastern edges of Newbury Park border the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, and many homes in those neighborhoods have hillside lots with tiered yards and direct views into open land. Borchard Community Park anchors the neighborhood's community life, while the 101 Freeway provides the main commercial spine along Thousand Oaks Boulevard. Older subdivisions near the foothills are characterized by larger lots, mature trees, and more architectural variety than the newer planned communities closer to the freeway. We serve homeowners throughout the area, as well as in the adjacent communities of Moorpark and throughout the Conejo Valley.
Affordable pressure-treated wood decks built to last.
Learn MoreNewbury Park homeowners can expect a response within one business day - call us now or send a free estimate request and we will get back to you quickly.