Shape around daily use
Lay out doors, grills, tables, stairs and walking paths at full scale. A slightly larger slab in the right direction is often more useful than an ornamental shape.
Grizzly builds concrete patios in Lake Stevens around views, slope, runoff and practical outdoor use. The patio elevation should work with doors, steps and yard drainage while the construction plan accounts for narrow access, existing stormwater features and the amount of new impervious surface added to the parcel.

Lake views can pull a patio toward the steepest edge of a yard, where retaining, guard or drainage questions may become more important than finish selection. Compare the desired seating position with stable grades and safe circulation before settling on the slab outline.
For a patio close to the home, map door sills, vents, siding clearance, downspouts and roof drip lines. For a detached slab, map the walking route and utilities so the finished space does not become isolated or difficult to light and serve later.
The useful estimate is based on the site and scope, not a generic square-foot number.
Planning, access, review and construction conditions determine the sequence.
Use the Lake Stevens Permit Center and building handouts to confirm the scope. A simple uncovered slab may differ from a covered patio, structural wall, substantial grading or work near mapped shoreline and critical areas. Impervious-surface calculations may also be relevant.
Lake Stevens building applications and handouts
Guidance reviewed July 15, 2026.
Always confirm current rules for the specific parcel and scope. This page is general project guidance, not a permit determination.
Real project images selected for this kind of work.



Lay out doors, grills, tables, stairs and walking paths at full scale. A slightly larger slab in the right direction is often more useful than an ornamental shape.
Compare broomed, exposed-aggregate, colored and stamped surfaces for traction, maintenance and how they meet the existing house instead of choosing from a small sample alone.
Coordinate slab pitch, downspouts and planting edges before the pour. Patio water should not collect at a threshold, foundation or low corner of the yard.
Yes, subject to project fit and scheduling. Start by sharing the property address, the outcome you want, current-condition photos and any drawings or permit records. Those details help separate a workable construction scope from assumptions that still need City or engineering review.
Potentially, but stable subgrade, setbacks, erosion, drainage and any need for retaining or guards should be evaluated first. The safest usable edge may not be the farthest point toward the view.
Use the Lake Stevens Permit Center and building handouts to confirm the scope. A simple uncovered slab may differ from a covered patio, structural wall, substantial grading or work near mapped shoreline and critical areas. Impervious-surface calculations may also be relevant.
Share the address, approximate dimensions, access photos and the existing condition. Also flag grade transitions, steps or retaining at the patio edge, restricted access and concrete pumping distance, runoff or downspout modifications. A site visit can then verify quantities, elevations and the work that belongs in the construction sequence.
Ready to build? Share the basics and we’ll start with a clear, straightforward conversation.