Posted on April 6, 2026
Storm sewer structures are one of those project components that can either keep a schedule moving or quietly derail it. When the specification is clear, the submittals come back clean, the structures arrive ready to set, and the crew moves on. When the specification is vague or incomplete, the result is RFIs, resubmittals, field coordination – Read the full article →
Posted on April 6, 2026
Getting a concrete sewer pipe specification right before a project goes to bid is one of those decisions that looks straightforward until it is not. What diameter handles the projected flow? Which ASTM class addresses the burial depth and loading conditions? Does the application call for rubber gaskets or is tongue and groove acceptable? These – Read the full article →
Posted on April 6, 2026
When a highway project calls for a drainage solution that can carry heavy traffic loads, manage high-volume storm flows, and still be in the ground performing reliably decades from now, the real question is not whether to use concrete – it is which concrete product fits the site. Highway culverts are not one-size-fits-all, and the – Read the full article →
Posted on April 6, 2026
When civil and municipal engineers sit down to spec a sanitary sewer system, one question drives nearly every material decision: what will still be performing reliably 50 or 100 years from now? For most Texas engineers, that answer is precast concrete wastewater structures – and for good reason. The combination of controlled factory production, proven – Read the full article →