Home / Services / Retaining Walls & Structural Concrete
Structural Concrete — Montgomery County, TX
Reinforced retaining walls, grade beams, equipment foundations, loading docks, and structural concrete for properties across Montgomery County and Southeast Texas.
Structures under permanent load don't forgive shortcuts. We build to the engineer's drawings with the drainage and reinforcement that keep concrete vertical for decades.
What's Included
Residential grade changes to industrial equipment foundations — engineered, reinforced, drained.
Retaining walls don't fail because the concrete was weak — they fail because water built up behind them with nowhere to go. Every wall we build gets the full drainage system its design calls for: gravel backfill, drain pipe, weep holes, and surface grading that sends water away from the wall instead of into it.
On the structural side, we pour equipment pads, machine foundations, dock walls, and grade beams to engineered specifications — anchor bolts, embeds, and steel schedules per the drawings, with documentation your engineer and inspector can sign off on.
How It Works
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
Straight Answers
If it's holding back serious grade — generally around 4 feet or taller, or any height with a slope, driveway, or structure above it — yes, and many jurisdictions require it. Engineering isn't a formality: a retaining wall is a structure under permanent load, and the engineered details (footing size, steel, drainage) are what keep it vertical for 50 years. We build to the engineer's design and can connect you with engineers we work with regularly.
Water, almost every time. A wall that can't drain builds up hydrostatic pressure behind it until something gives — leaning, cracking, or full failure. Every wall we build includes the drainage system the design calls for: gravel backfill, drain pipe, weep holes, and grading that moves water away. It's the part you never see and the reason the wall lasts.
Poured reinforced concrete is the stronger, longer-lived option and what we recommend for walls under real load — it acts as one monolithic structure. Segmental block has its place for shorter landscape walls. We'll tell you straight which your situation needs; we don't upsell a poured wall where a garden border will do.
Yes — reinforced pads and foundations for generators, HVAC equipment, machinery, and tanks, built to the equipment manufacturer's or engineer's specs including anchor bolts and embeds.
Yes — dock walls, approach slabs, ramps, and stairs for commercial and industrial properties, engineered for the truck and forklift loads they'll carry.
Driven by height and length, the engineered design (footing size, steel, thickness), site access for excavation and concrete trucks, and the drainage scope. A 3-foot landscape wall and an 8-foot engineered wall holding a driveway are different animals entirely. Site walk and firm written number — free.
Tell us about the slope, the load, or the equipment — we'll walk the site, flag whether engineering is needed, and price it straight.
Residential • Commercial • Industrial • Montgomery County & Beyond