Project Journal: Chabad House at the University of Delaware

Author Name
By Mike Klein
Oct 28, 2025 12:00 PM
Completed landscape at Chabad House, University of Delaware with fresh sod and new plantings.

When we arrived at the Chabad House, the construction crews were wrapping up the building itself. The site had been a full-scale construction zone for months, and our team was the last to come through. What remained was a blank canvas of compacted soil, tire tracks, and grading issues that needed careful correction before the property could look and function the way it should.

Property cleanup and soil prep before grading work at University of Delaware Chabad House.
Leveling 30–40 tons of soil for stormwater management and lawn prep in Newark, Delaware.

Our first step was cleanup and regrading - moving roughly 30 to 40 tons of soil to shape the ground according to the engineered drainage plan. Working with a skid steer and soil conditioner attachment, we created proper runoff contours so rainwater would flow away from the building, not toward it.

Crew installing 9,000 square feet of sod at University of Delaware Chabad House.

Once the foundation work was done, we rolled out over 9,000 square feet of fresh sod to establish the new lawn. 

Beds with planted Arborvitae, American holly and southern magnolia along parking area at Chabad House, UD.

Around the perimeter, we cut clean new beds and planted a mix of evergreens and ornamentals to frame the building and create privacy where it mattered. The plantings included about a dozen trees and several large shrubs - American holly, hornbeam, and southern magnolia - along with five ten-foot arborvitae near the parking lot to soften the approach.

Finished landscape design with sod, grading, and plantings at Chabad House, UD.

By the time we wrapped up, the Chabad House had gone from a construction site to a finished property ready for students and the community to gather. It’s the kind of project that reminds us how much a thoughtful landscape can do to bring a new building to life.

We handle projects like this throughout Newark and the greater Wilmington area, particularly when a new building needs proper grading and planting to function the way it was designed. This type of work falls within our landscape design and installation services, where soil preparation, drainage, and long-term plant health are addressed from the start. When the groundwork is done correctly, the landscape supports the building instead of competing with it.

If you’re planning a commercial or institutional project, the right grading and planting plan makes all the difference. One Thousand Hands works with engineered drawings, architects, and property owners to turn sites like this into finished, living spaces that work as well as they look.

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