How We Execute Concrete Work
The field work matters, but the real win is turning a risky concrete package into an executable sequence before the project is boxed in.
Six steps from scope alignment to clean turnover.
Scope Alignment
We review drawings, identify missing information, quantify the package, and clarify the concrete scope so the field is not solving bid-day gaps later.
Pre-Pour Engineering
Mix design, sequencing, joints, embeds, anchor bolts, layout control, access, and inspection requirements are coordinated into one executable plan.
Form, Reinforce, Verify
Forms, reinforcement, embeds, sleeves, and elevations are installed and checked against the latest issued drawings before placement begins.
Place & Finish
Crew choreography, placement rate, finishing sequence, weather response, and protection measures are managed around the quality requirements of the slab or structure.
Cure, Cut, Protect
We manage curing, sawcut timing, protection, and access control so the concrete gains strength without getting damaged by premature traffic or trade overlap.
Punch & Turnover
Patch items, cleanup, test documentation, and final turnover are closed out so the next trade has a clean handoff and the package does not linger on the schedule.
The checkpoints that keep concrete from becoming rework.
Layout & Tolerance Control
Control lines, benchmark verification, and layout checks happen before forms are signed off, not after the pump is on site.
Embeds, Bolts & Sleeves
Anchor bolts, embeds, blockouts, penetrations, and sleeves get reviewed against downstream steel, equipment, and MEP requirements.
Placement & Finish Plan
Crew size, pour breaks, access routes, finishing sequence, and protection measures are decided before placement starts.
Curing, Testing & Turnover
Break schedules, curing protection, joint timing, punch cleanup, and follow-on trade turnover are built into the execution plan.
What helps us turn around the package cleanly.
Drawings or Scope Notes
Issued plans are great, but even a marked-up PDF or scope narrative helps us understand what is defined and what still needs alignment.
Schedule Context
A milestone schedule, turnover date, shutdown window, or steel need date tells us where the concrete scope is truly carrying risk.
Known Constraints
Live operations, limited access, inspection requirements, night work, or sensitive tolerances should be surfaced early so the plan matches reality.
Frequently Asked Questions
Need the concrete package locked in?
Send drawings, scope notes, or a rough brief. We can engage at budget stage or on a fully defined trade package.