Blue-tile pool with cantilever shade, designed and built by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape in Broussard, Acadiana
Landscape Design & Build · Broussard, LA

Luxury Landscape Design
in Broussard
Beach-Casual Outdoor Living, Where the Turf Meets the Surf

Quick Answer

Who is the best landscape design-build contractor in Broussard?

Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape is a fully licensed Louisiana design-build firm (LSLBC #2600441 (placeholder)) specializing in luxury outdoor living for Broussard, from the tight, ultra-premium lots of the Beach Colony to the hillside view lots of Olde Broussard and the larger mesa lots of Broussard Heights. With 2,900+ completed projects, we design and build for Broussard's specific realities: the city's own Design Review Board, its in-house Local Coastal Program and coastal use permits, eroding sandstone bluffs, expansive Broussard Formation soils, and salt air. One team handles design, design review, permitting, and construction across every Broussard neighborhood.

Outdoor Living in Broussard

Landscape design built
for Broussard

Broussard shares Abbeville's coastline but almost none of its bureaucracy. It is its own incorporated city, with its own Planning Department, its own Design Review Board, its own certified Local Coastal Program, and even its own municipal water utility. A pool, a retaining wall, or a regraded hillside here answers to Broussard's rules, not the City of Rayne's. Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape designs and builds outdoor living spaces that move through that specific gauntlet smoothly, because we know exactly how it works.

As a true design-build firm, we carry every project under one roof: site and soils assessment, 3D design, structural and geotechnical engineering, design review, coastal permitting, and construction. That single source accountability matters in a town where the landscape design itself (plant palette, hardscape materials, colors, walls, and anything affecting a neighbor's protected ocean view) is a reviewable element. A design that respects sightlines and uses harmonious materials clears Design Review; one that doesn't gets stuck in hearings.

Broussard's character is its own, too: premium but barefoot, glamorous but relaxed, the town that gave us "where the turf meets the surf." We design for how people actually live here, around entertaining and indoor-outdoor flow: alfresco dining, outdoor kitchens, fire lounges, plunge pools, and view-framed terraces tuned for race-season parties and quiet sunsets alike. Every material and plant is specified for life a few hundred feet from the Gulf.


Building in Broussard's Own City

What makes a Broussard project different

01

Broussard runs its own Design Review

Unlike Abbeville, Broussard reviews most exterior work through its own Design Review Board under the city's Design Review Ordinance, and the landscape design itself counts. Staff and the DRB weigh placement, size, materials, colors, walls, fences, and the type and extent of planting, with heavy emphasis on protecting neighbors' ocean views. We design to those criteria from the first sketch so projects clear Administrative or Regular Design Review instead of stalling in hearings.

02

The city issues its own coastal permits

Broussard operates under its own certified Local Coastal Program and issues coastal use permits in-house. Retaining walls, grading and terracing, decks, pools, and work that changes grade or affects setbacks can all trigger a coastal use permit. Grading over roughly 18 inches or 25 cubic yards generally pulls a permit. We determine what your specific parcel requires up front and manage Broussard's combined Design Review and coastal use permit process so the timeline holds.

03

Eroding bluffs demand drainage-first design

Broussard's bluffs are soft, fast-eroding sandstone over weaker claystone, a different animal from Abbeville's harder rock, and uncontrolled water is the leading accelerant of bluff failure. On bluff-adjacent lots we engineer surface and subsurface drainage, respect the city's bluff-edge setbacks (typically 40 feet, increased by site-specific geotechnical analysis), keep added load back from the edge, and use deep-rooted native plantings for stabilization.

04

The Broussard Formation under your feet

The bluffs and hillsides sit on the Broussard Formation, a named geologic unit of greenish claystone and muddy sandstone that is highly expansive where it meets finished grade. Expansive clay heaves and cracks slabs, pool decks, outdoor-kitchen footings, and walls that aren't engineered for it. We soil-test per parcel and design foundations, moisture-stable subgrade, flexible paving, and drainage to match the ground each structure sits on.

05

Marine-grade everything

Broussard sits fully exposed between two lagoons, under a heavy coastal fog and constant salt air. We specify 316 marine-grade stainless for outdoor kitchens and hardware, powder-coated aluminum, porcelain pavers, corrosion-resistant lighting and pool equipment, and a salt-tolerant plant palette of agaves, succulents, coastal natives, and ornamental grasses, so nothing pits, rusts, or burns out a season after install.

06

Designed for beach-casual entertaining

Broussard living is upscale but relaxed, set to the rhythm of race season, fair weekends, and sunset gatherings. We design outdoor rooms around that: connected indoor-outdoor flow, generous alfresco dining and outdoor kitchens, fire lounges, plunge and spool pools for tight lots, and shaded view terraces. It's the kind of entertaining the Rayne Magazine Broussard Wine + Food Festival has made part of the town's identity.

Neighborhoods We Serve

Every corner of Broussard

Beach Colony

The tightest, most expensive lots in Broussard, wedged between the railroad and the sand. Small-footprint luxury: courtyards, plunge and spool pools, privacy screening, and indoor-outdoor flow under maximum salt and sand exposure.

Olde Broussard

The walkable, hilly village core, full of view lots. Hillside terracing, retaining walls, and view-protective design, the most Design-Review-sensitive corner of town, turn slopes into tiered outdoor rooms that capture the ocean.

Broussard Heights

East of I-10 on the mesa, with larger lots that have room for full programs: resort pools, outdoor kitchens, fire features, lawns, and generous planting. (Distinct from City-of-Lafayette Youngsville, despite the shared mailing address.)

The Crest & Crest Canyon

Hillside homes with views over Crest Canyon open space. View-oriented design with careful hillside drainage and erosion control on the slopes above the reserve.

Broussard Terrace

Eclectic, viewy pockets at the south end near Vermilion Pines and Bayou Tortue Lagoon. Native, lagoon-adjacent, habitat-sensitive planting suits this edge of town.

Broussard Woods

Bluff-top, lock-and-leave living with ocean outlooks. Low-maintenance, drought-tolerant, HOA-coordinated landscapes built for second-home and lifestyle owners.

Portfolio

Outdoor living across Broussard

Blue-tile pool with cantilever shade in Broussard by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape
Covered outdoor kitchen and bar in Broussard by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape
Illuminated front-yard planting with palms in Broussard by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape
Contemporary drought-tolerant front yard in Broussard by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape
Louvered pergola over a paver patio in Broussard by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape
Covered outdoor kitchen and lounge in Broussard by Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape
Common Questions

Landscape Design and Build in Broussard

Yes, this is the biggest difference from a place like Abbeville. Broussard is its own incorporated city with its own Planning Department, its own Design Review Board, its own certified Local Coastal Program, and even its own municipal water utility. Permits, design review, and coastal use permits are all issued in-house by the City of Broussard, not the City of Rayne. The state coastal-management office generally only gets involved on appeal. Practically, that means your project is judged against Broussard's own design and coastal standards, and a firm that knows those standards is a real advantage. Abshire Brothers Lawn & Landscape manages Broussard's combined Design Review and coastal use permit process end to end.

Often, yes. Broussard's Design Review Ordinance makes most exterior work subject to some level of review, and the landscape design itself is explicitly part of it. The city weighs placement, size, materials, colors, walls, fences, and the type and extent of planting, with strong emphasis on protecting neighbors' ocean views. Minor projects can go through Administrative Design Review based on neighborhood input, while larger-scope work goes to a hearing before the Design Review Board. We design to those criteria from the start, using view-protective layouts and harmonious materials so projects move through review rather than getting stuck in it.

Yes, with the right engineering. Broussard's bluffs are soft, fast-eroding sandstone over weaker claystone, and uncontrolled water is the leading cause of bluff failure, so drainage is the first thing we design, not the last. Bluff-adjacent projects fall under the city's Bluff Overlay Zone, require a site-specific geotechnical report, and must respect bluff-edge setbacks (typically around 40 feet, often increased by a parcel's erosion analysis). We engineer surface and subsurface drainage, keep added load like pools and heavy hardscape back from the edge, and use deep-rooted native plantings for stabilization. New hard armoring such as seawalls is tightly restricted, so respecting the setback is the strategy.

Broussard sits fully exposed between two lagoons, under a heavy coastal fog and constant salt air, so we lead with marine-grade materials and a salt-tolerant palette. That means 316 marine-grade stainless for outdoor kitchens and hardware, powder-coated aluminum, porcelain pavers, and corrosion-resistant lighting and pool equipment, plus agaves, succulents, ornamental grasses, palms, and coastal natives that shrug off salt and humidity. Every landscape we design meets Louisiana's water-efficiency standards, documented for Broussard's own water utility, with hydrozoned smart irrigation and a drought-tolerant plant selection.

All of them: the Beach Colony, Olde Broussard, Broussard Heights, the Crest and Crest Canyon, Broussard Terrace, and Broussard Woods. Each is a different design problem: tight, flat, ultra-premium beach lots in the Colony; hilly, view-protective lots in Olde Broussard; and larger mesa lots in the Heights. One note we always clarify up front: Broussard Heights (inside the City of Broussard) is separate from Youngsville and Broussard Mesa, which are City of Rayne communities that share a 'Broussard' mailing address but follow different permitting. We confirm which jurisdiction governs your parcel before we design.

Construction timelines are similar to the rest of Rayne, with most pool and landscape projects running 10 to 16 weeks of build time, but Broussard's approval phase is the variable. The city's Design Review process and its in-house coastal use permit process can add to the front end, especially on view lots or bluff-adjacent parcels that need geotechnical analysis. We give you a realistic, parcel-specific timeline at the design stage that accounts for whatever Design Review and coastal approvals your project needs, rather than an optimistic estimate that ignores Broussard's own process.

Get Started

Transform your
Broussard property

Schedule your complimentary design consultation. We'll visit your property, walk your space, and show you exactly what's possible.