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Ipê & Exotic Hardwood Decking in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador

BestDecks.ca builds ipê & exotic hardwood decking in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador with a licensed local crew. Labour in St. John's averages $18–$26/sq ft, with footings set below the 1.5m (5 ft) frost line. One BestDecks contract covers design, permits ($200–$400), materials rated for 70+ freeze-thaw cycles, and full installation — backed by the BestDecks warranty.

Building in St. John's

St. John's receives 1,500mm of precipitation and 335cm of snow — the wettest and snowiest major city in Canada — making PVC the clear winner.

Frost line

1.5m (5 ft)

Freeze-thaw

70+ cycles/yr

Winter

-5°C

Build season

May–October

Why Ipê & Exotic Hardwood Decking works in St. John's

St. John's receives 1500mm of annual precipitation — one of the wettest markets in Canada for deck construction. When choosing ipê & exotic hardwood decking here, moisture resistance isn't optional, it's the #1 selection criterion. With 335cm of annual snowfall, snow load is a real design factor — your deck structure and ipê & exotic hardwood decking must support accumulated weight without deflection. The Atlantic salt air in St. John's corrodes standard hardware within 2-3 years. Any ipê & exotic hardwood decking installation here requires stainless steel fasteners and marine-grade connectors. Deck labour in St. John's runs $18–$26/sq ft, with permits at $200–$400. The build season here is May–October, so timing your project right means better crew availability and potentially lower costs during shoulder months.

Ipê (pronounced "ee-pay"), also called Brazilian Walnut or Ironwood, is a tropical hardwood from Central and South America. It is the densest and hardest commercially available decking wood, with a Janka hardness rating of 3,680 lbs — compared to 350 for cedar and 570 for pressure-treated SPF.

Key Takeaways:

  • Ipê is the hardest and most durable decking wood — Janka rating of 3,680 (7x harder than cedar)
  • Costs $15–$35 per sq ft for materials — the most expensive wood option
  • Lifespan: 40–75 years with minimal maintenance — outlasts every other decking material except aluminum
  • Class A fire rating — approved for wildfire-prone zones where composite may be restricted
  • Requires carbide-tipped saw blades and pre-drilling for every screw — not a DIY-friendly material

What Is Ipê?

Ipê (pronounced "ee-pay"), also called Brazilian Walnut or Ironwood, is a tropical hardwood from Central and South America. It is the densest and hardest commercially available decking wood, with a Janka hardness rating of 3,680 lbs — compared to 350 for cedar and 570 for pressure-treated SPF.

This extreme density makes Ipê virtually impervious to insect damage, rot, and surface wear. Ipê boardwalks installed on the Atlantic City boardwalk in the 1930s are still in service — nearly 100 years later.

Cost Breakdown (300 sq ft Deck)

Component Cost Range
Ipê deck boards $4,500–$10,500
Substructure (PT or steel) $1,200–$2,000
Stainless steel fasteners (mandatory) $400–$600
Railings (Ipê or aluminum) $3,000–$6,000
Specialized labour $6,000–$12,000
Total installed $15,100–$31,100

Ipê labour costs are 30–50% higher than standard decking because installation requires specialized tools, pre-drilling every fastener hole, and significantly more time per board.

Performance

Durability

Ipê rates Class 1 (most durable) for decay resistance. The natural oils — lapachol and other extractives — make it resistant to fungal decay, termites, marine borers, and UV degradation without any applied finish.

Fire Rating

Ipê achieves a Class A fire rating (flame spread index <25) — the same rating as concrete and steel. This is critical in BC's wildfire interface zones where some municipalities restrict composite and wood decking.

Cold Performance

Ipê's extreme density means it absorbs very little moisture, making it highly resistant to freeze-thaw damage. However, the wood is very hard — it becomes slightly more brittle in extreme cold (-30°C and below). Installation should not be done when temperatures are below -10°C.

Appearance and Aging

Fresh Ipê ranges from olive brown to dark chocolate brown with fine grain patterns. Left untreated, it weathers to a silver-grey patina over 12–24 months — similar to cedar but more uniform.

To maintain the original dark brown colour:

  • Apply Ipê oil (such as Penofin or Cabot Australian Timber Oil) once per year
  • No sanding required between applications
  • Total annual maintenance time: 2–3 hours for a 300 sq ft deck

Sustainability Concerns

Ipê is a slow-growing tropical hardwood. Responsible sourcing matters:

  • FSC-certified Ipê is available but commands a 15–25% premium
  • Look for suppliers who can provide chain of custody documentation
  • Illegal logging remains a concern in some source regions
  • Consider aluminum decking as an alternative with similar lifespan and zero deforestation impact

Who Should Choose Ipê?

Ipê is for homeowners who want the absolute best and plan to stay in their home for decades. The 40–75 year lifespan means a deck built today may never need replacing. It's also the only natural wood option for fire-rated zones in BC where composite and standard wood are restricted.

Labour rate

$18–$26/sq ft

Permit fees

$200–$400

Population

114K

Quote response

Within 48 h

Included

What you get in St. John's.

01Licensed local BestDecks crew in St. John's
02Fixed-price quote — labour at $18–$26/sq ft for St. John's
03Permits pulled ($200–$400 in St. John's) and inspections coordinated
04Footings engineered to 1.5m (5 ft) frost line for Newfoundland and Labrador
05Materials rated for 70+ freeze-thaw cycles
06One BestDecks warranty on structure and finish
Popular in St. John's

Top decking materials for St. John's's climate.

Composite Decking

$6–$18/sq ft

PVC Decking

$12–$22/sq ft

Pressure-Treated Wood Decking

$2–$5/sq ft

FREQUENTLY ASKED

The questions homeowners ask.

Straight answers on materials, permits, warranties, and what to expect during a build.

  • In St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, deck labour averages $18–$26/sq ft — final cost depends on deck size, materials, and site complexity. Footings must reach below the 1.5m (5 ft) frost line per Newfoundland and Labrador building code. Permits in St. John's cost $200–$400. BestDecks provides an all-inclusive fixed-price quote — materials, labour, permits, and warranty included.

  • In St. John's, most decks over 24 inches above grade require a building permit ($200–$400 in fees). Footings must reach 1.5m (5 ft) below grade to meet Newfoundland and Labrador's frost line requirements. BestDecks handles the entire permit process — drawings, application, and inspection coordination. Building season in St. John's runs May–October.

  • BestDecks has a licensed local crew in St. John's who understands the 70+ annual freeze-thaw cycles and 1.5m (5 ft) footing depth requirements. Serving St. John's's 114,000 residents, we select materials proven in Newfoundland and Labrador's climate. One contract, one warranty, fixed-price quote.

Backyard deck at evening with string lights and outdoor dining setup in Canada
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