Prairie Falls is the golf-course community on the north side of Post Falls, where the homes wrap the fairways of the Prairie Falls Golf Club in Kootenai County. It is a planned neighborhood with consistent elevations, manicured front yards, and an HOA that keeps the streetscape tidy — and a shed here has to read like it was always part of that, not like an afterthought parked on the lawn. We build custom sheds on-site in Prairie Falls, right on your lot, so the building is framed and finished in place to match the house. Most owners want a trim storage shed for the cart-path overflow and yard tools, or a finished she-shed tucked into the back corner with a view of the course.
Because the building goes together where it sits, we place it to respect the open feel the neighborhood is built around — kept back from the fairway edge, in scale with the home, and tied to the grade the builder already set.

A custom shed built on-site in Prairie Falls, Post Falls — trimmed and colored to match the homes along the Prairie Falls Golf Club.
Prairie Falls lots fall into two camps, and they build differently. Interior lots are flat, fenced, and tight on side-yard room, reached through a side gate or off the driveway — placement is the first thing we work out so the shed protects the usable yard. Fairway-edge lots are the ones to plan around carefully: backing onto the course usually means an open rear with no fence, sightlines the HOA cares about, and covenants that often restrict how close an outbuilding can sit to the course-side line. A garden shed or storage shed in the 8x10 to 10x14 range fits most of these backyards and keeps the patio open, and a finished home office reads as part of the house when the roofline and color tie back to it.
Matching the neighborhood is the rest of the job. With the homes built to a consistent look, an outbuilding that misses on roof pitch, trim, or color stands out from the course and the street both, so we spec siding and color pulled straight from your house and keep the rooflines clean. Prairie Falls runs an architectural committee and CC&Rs, so pull the requirements and submit for written approval before the build — the permits page covers how the City of Post Falls and Kootenai County setbacks fit on top of the neighborhood's own rules.
Prairie Falls runs an architectural committee with CC&Rs that govern outbuildings. Submit the style, roofline, siding, color, and placement for written approval before the build.
Course-side lots often have an open rear with no fence and sightline rules. We set the building back from the course line and keep it low-profile so it stays in scale with the home.
Siding and color pulled from your house, with clean rooflines, keep the shed reading as part of a Prairie Falls home rather than a generic backyard box.

On a Prairie Falls fairway lot, an 8x10 to 10x14 footprint keeps the rear open to the course and stays in scale with the home.
Yes. Prairie Falls is a planned golf-course community with an architectural committee and CC&Rs, so plan to submit your shed for review before the build. They typically look at the style, roofline, siding, color, and where the building sits — and on course-side lots they pay particular attention to sightlines from the fairway. Because we build on your lot, we spec the roof, trim, and color around whatever you get approved. Once you have the requirements and submittal form in hand, we build the shed to match them.
Usually, yes. Fairway-edge lots tend to have an open rear with no fence, and the covenants often restrict how close an outbuilding can sit to the course-side line and how visible it can be from the fairway, to keep the open look the community is built around. We set the building back from the course line, keep the profile low, and match the siding and color to your home so it reads as part of the house. Confirm the course-side setback with the HOA before you settle on a spot.
Tie it straight back to your house. Prairie Falls homes are built to a consistent look, so a clean gable or low-slope roof and siding and color pulled from your elevation read far better than a rustic, mismatched building — especially when it is visible from the course. Since we frame and finish on your property, we line up the roofline, door, and window placement with the home. The configurator is a good way to preview the look and color before you submit it to the architectural committee.
Two sets of rules stack here. The City of Post Falls and Kootenai County set minimum distances from your side and rear property lines for an accessory building, and the Prairie Falls CC&Rs add their own placement rules on top — including, on course-side lots, how close the building can sit to the fairway boundary. Confirm both before you pick a spot. Our permits page explains how the city and county rules fit together, and we place the shed to meet the setbacks while keeping your yard and course view usable.
It depends on the lot. Interior backyards are usually reached through a side gate or off the driveway, and smaller footprints in the 8x10 to 10x14 range are the easiest to bring in and assemble in a compact, fenced yard. Course-side lots often have an open rear off the fairway, which can make access simpler, but we stage the work to keep off the course and protect the turf. Tell us how your lot is reached and we fit the build sequence to it without tearing out fencing or landscaping.

Get a free estimate or price an HOA-ready shed in the configurator before you submit it to the Prairie Falls architectural committee.
We build on site across North Idaho. Explore other communities near Post Falls for local access, setback, and HOA-approval notes.