
Drainage Installation
Drainage should be considered before new sod, pavers, turf, rock or planting is installed—not after the property is finished.
Drainage should be considered before new sod, pavers, turf, rock or planting is installed—not after the property is finished.
Landscape drainage improvements planned around grade, runoff, downspout discharge, low areas and the intended finished surface.

What the service can include
- Site and flow-path review
- Grade and low-area evaluation
- Drainage route planning
- Drain or swale installation
- Surface restoration
A detailed proposal before work begins
Every property is different. The proposal is developed after reviewing access, measurements, existing conditions, material needs and how this service connects to the rest of the landscape.
Why property owners choose Supreme Landscaping
- Better management of recurring wet areas
- Protect new landscape investments
- Coordinate drainage with finish grading
Our project process
Review the property
We discuss goals, access, current conditions and the desired finished result.
Define scope and materials
Recommendations are coordinated with grade, drainage, adjacent surfaces and maintenance goals.
Schedule and install
The work is sequenced to keep preparation, delivery, installation and cleanup organized.
Final walkthrough
We review the completed work and any care or follow-up considerations.
Planning a result that lasts
Drainage improvements begin with observing where water enters, collects and exits. The solution must work with existing grades, downspouts, landscape beds and neighboring surfaces.
The result is more controlled water movement and better protection for lawns, beds, hardscape and usable outdoor areas. During the property review, the team also considers how this work connects to nearby grades, irrigation, walkways, planting beds and future improvements. That broader view helps avoid short-term fixes that create another problem elsewhere on the site.
Drainage Installation by community
Explore drainage installation for your Brevard County community, then request a proposal based on the conditions at your property.