Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · May 31
Mike Dominique Lands 1st White Picket Fence Order of Spring as 6-Foot Privacy Walls Dominate
Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · May 31

Mike Dominique Lands 1st White Picket Fence Order of Spring as 6-Foot Privacy Walls Dominate

1 articles · Updated · The Washington Post · May 31
  • Edward Cink accepted Mike Dominique’s quote for a stained-white cedar fence, giving the Connecticut contractor his first white picket fence order of the spring ahead of the home’s open house.
  • Zero picket-fence sales had alarmed Dominique because by this point last year he had sold 20, underscoring how sharply demand has shifted toward taller, gap-free barriers.
  • Customers increasingly favor low-maintenance vinyl or composite fences that last 30-plus years and offer more privacy, while Dominique said cedar costs have risen by a third over the past year.
  • At Southington Rustic Fence, picket fences once made up about 40% of orders in his father’s era; now Dominique’s $80,000 equipment mostly turns out vinyl products.
  • The lone new order stands out against broader tastes shaped by child safety, privacy and security concerns, suggesting the white picket fence has become a niche symbol rather than a default suburban choice.
As tariffs reshape home improvement, is the vinyl fence boom here to stay or just a fleeting economic trend?
Beyond wood and vinyl, what next-gen materials will build the privacy-focused fences of America's future?
As private vinyl fences replace iconic wood pickets, what is the hidden cost to our communities and environment?