Home / Services / Residential Foundations
House Slabs & Foundations — Montgomery County, TX
Engineered post-tension and rebar foundations for new homes, custom builds, and additions across Montgomery, Conroe, Willis, Magnolia, and The Woodlands.
Everything in your home sits on this one pour. We build it to the engineer's drawings, on soil prepped for Montgomery County clay, with every inspection passed before concrete moves.
What's Included
For homeowners building on their land and custom builders who need a foundation sub that holds schedule.
Foundation problems in this county almost always trace back to the same two causes: expansive clay that wasn't prepped correctly, and slabs built loosely from the plans. We attack both. Your foundation gets built exactly to the engineer's design — beam depths, steel or cable schedules, elevations — on a pad that's been stripped, filled, and compacted to give the slab a stable base.
We pour post-tension and conventional rebar foundations, coordinate plumbing rough-in and every required inspection, and on PT jobs we manage tendon stressing after the pour. Whether you're an owner building on acreage or a builder running multiple starts, you get one point of contact and a schedule we actually hit.
How It Works
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
Straight Answers
That call belongs to your foundation engineer, not your contractor — and you should be suspicious of any contractor who picks one without an engineered design. In Montgomery County's expansive clay, post-tension slabs are very common for new homes because the tensioned cables help the slab perform as one unit on moving soil; conventional rebar designs are also used where the geotech report supports it. We build both, exactly to the engineer's drawings, and coordinate the tendon stressing on PT jobs.
Yes — builder relationships are a core part of our residential work. We hold schedules, keep the site clean, pass inspections the first time, and communicate ahead of problems. If you're a builder looking for a foundation sub you don't have to babysit, send us your next set of plans and judge us on one job.
The main cost drivers: the home's square footage and shape (corners and offsets add forming labor), the engineered design (post-tension vs rebar, beam depths), how much pad building and select fill your lot needs, plumbing complexity, and lot access. A foundation on a flat cleared lot in a subdivision prices very differently than one on sloped, wooded acreage. We give a firm written number from your plans and a site visit — free.
For a new home, yes — a geotechnical report is what your engineer designs the foundation from, and in our area's expansive clays it's cheap insurance against the most expensive problem a house can have. If you don't have one yet, we can point you to local geotech firms we work with regularly.
Yes. Additions require tying the new foundation to the existing one correctly — doweled connections, matching elevations, and accounting for how the old and new slabs will move relative to each other. We handle the layout, the tie-in, and inspection coordination.
Typically 1–3 weeks from dirt work to pour: pad building, forms and beams, plumbing rough-in and inspection, steel or cable placement and inspection, then the pour. Post-tension jobs add tendon stressing a few days after the pour. Weather and inspection scheduling are the usual variables — we build those into the schedule we commit to your builder or your lender's timeline.
Building a home or an addition? Send the plans or tell us about the lot — we'll walk it and price it, free.
Residential • Commercial • Industrial • Montgomery County & Beyond