This is what the company was built on. Ponds, creek beds, streams, and waterfalls — all natural stone, all engineered to sustain themselves. Not a plastic liner with a pump and some rocks scattered on top. These are real aquatic systems that balance biologically and look like they’ve been on the property for decades.
What we build
Koi ponds and garden ponds — Natural stone edges, proper depth zones, and filtration sized for the water volume. Our ponds support fish and aquatic plants without constant chemical treatment. The stone edging is hand-laid to look like a shoreline, not a bathtub ring.
Creek beds and streams — Dry creek beds that handle drainage while looking like a natural feature, or active recirculating streams that actually move water through your yard. Creek beds solve a real problem on a lot of Georgia properties — they route water away from the house without looking like a drainage pipe.
Waterfalls — Standalone features or integrated into ponds and streams. Anything from a small garden drop to a multi-level cascade. The 15,000 GPH noise-curtain waterfall we built near a busy road is one of the more unusual ones — the homeowner wanted water sounds instead of traffic. See The Master of Water project.
Why engineering matters
Water features fail when the plumbing is undersized, the filtration is wrong, or nobody thought about drainage. We size every system for the specific site — pump capacity, pipe diameter, biological filtration, overflow, winterization. Our equipment is commercial-grade and rated for year-round outdoor use in Georgia.
A pond or creek bed that’s built right should run for years on a seasonal pump check and occasional filter cleaning. That’s what we aim for.
The stone is what makes it look real
The gap between a water feature that looks installed and one that looks natural comes down to the stone. We use irregular fieldstone, moss rock, and native Georgia stone for edges, spillways, and streambeds. John picks the stone with you at the yard — you decide the character of every rock that goes in the water.
Where we’ve built them
Buckhead, Marietta, Sandy Springs, Roswell, Dunwoody, Johns Creek, Cumming, Woodstock. Georgia’s mild winters mean water features run most of the year without a full shutdown.
Call John at (770) 361-7446 or email [email protected].
