In-house crane access for tight lots and oversized trees.
Creative Tree & Stump LLC is a Brighton, CO-based tree removal company serving 22 communities across Adams, Weld, Jefferson, Boulder, Broomfield, and Denver counties — and we own our crane outright. That means no waiting on a subcontractor and no rental markup, with owner Shawn Brandau, an ISA Certified Arborist, running the operation himself, as he has across the Front Range since 1991. Crane work is as much about judgment as equipment — knowing how much each section weighs, where its balance point sits, and how the remaining tree will react after every pick.
A crane is the right call when a tree is too large, too dead, or too tightly surrounded to dismantle by rope alone. Brittle species such as cottonwood and silver maple are prime candidates, because their wood can fail unpredictably under a climber’s rigging — lifting the wood with a crane keeps load off the tree and the climber. With brittle wood, that is not a convenience — it is the margin that prevents a failure mid-removal.
It is also the gentler option for your property. Rather than lowering heavy sections through the canopy and across the yard, the crane swings each piece directly to a drop area, sparing lawns, gardens, fences and patios from impact. For homeowners who have spent years on their landscaping, that controlled removal is often the deciding factor.
The crane is set up in a stable spot with clear airspace to the tree. A climber or bucket operator ties each section to the crane’s line, makes the cut, and the section is lifted clear and lowered to the ground crew in the drop zone. The sequence repeats from the top down until the trunk is gone — every pick weighed and balanced so nothing is overloaded.
It is precise, methodical work that demands an experienced operator and ground crew working in sync. Because the same owner-led team handles both the saw and the signals, communication stays tight and the picks stay controlled from start to finish. Every lift is planned within the crane’s rated capacity for that radius, with a safety margin built in — we never test the limit of the machine over your house.
Many older neighborhoods in Brighton and across the metro have narrow side yards, alley access and large legacy trees planted close to the house. On lots like these there is simply nowhere to drop wood, so a crane is often the only way to remove a big tree without damaging the property. We have removed countless legacy trees from yards where a conventional takedown would have meant tearing up the lawn or the fence to get the wood out.
Crane picks are also faster, which usually means fewer crew hours on site and less disruption to your day. We serve crane removals across all 22 of the communities we cover, from confined urban lots to large rural properties. If a tree can be reached by the crane’s boom from a stable setup, we can usually remove it without ever dropping wood across the yard.
Shawn Brandau has run crane removals across the Front Range since 1991 — an ISA Certified Arborist directing every pick, full insurance on every job, and an in-house crane with no subcontractor markup.
Big, leaning or compromised trees taken down safely near structures.
Large & hazardous removal →Brittle, heavy cottonwoods are classic candidates for a crane pick.
Cottonwood removal →Yes. We own and operate our crane in-house, so there is no waiting on a rental or a third-party operator and no added markup. The owner-led crew runs the crane and the rigging together. You are not paying a middleman to coordinate two separate companies, and there is no scheduling gap waiting on someone else’s equipment.
Not necessarily. A crane often finishes a difficult tree in far less time and with less property risk than rope rigging, which can make it competitive or even cheaper on the right job. We compare methods in your estimate. On a straightforward open-yard tree, climbing may still be the better value; on a tight, oversized or dead one, the crane usually wins on both safety and total time on site, which is what most homeowners actually care about.
Usually, yes — we assess access and airspace during the estimate. The crane sets up in a stable spot with a clear path to the tree; it does not need to drive up to the trunk to make the picks.
Large, dead or brittle trees — especially cottonwoods and silver maples — and any tree boxed in by structures with no safe drop zone. The crane keeps load off compromised wood and off your property.
Usually, yes. A crane can clear a large tree in a fraction of the time it takes to climb and rope it down piece by piece, which means fewer crew hours, less disruption and lower risk on the right job.
Ask the owner whether a crane pick is right for your tree — free on-site estimate.