Tennessee Underground Utility Construction

Tennessee Utility Contractors provides Tennessee with underground utility and infrastructure construction services via three methods of service: horizontal directional boring (HDD) more commonly called directional boring, horizontal auger boring and hand-tunneling.

We provide Tennessee commercial, residential and municipal owners and contractors with underground utility construction services specializing in the underground directional boring of utility pipelines for electric power, solar, wind, telephone, satellite, cable, TV, Internet, wi-fi, fiber optic, security, oil, gas, petroleum, steam, sewer, drain, water and irrigation crossings.

As an Tennessee expert boring contracting company, we excavate an opening beneath the ground without disturbing the surface to bore underground pipes for utility line crossings of all types of diameters and lengths both large and small.

From electrical to fiber optic runs, oil and gas pipelines, sewer lines and water mains, our boring company team uses directional boring techniques to place HDPE, PVC and steel pipe, conduit and cables under almost any surface like concrete slabs, driveways, roadways, sidewalks and walkways in diverse terrains like dirt, clay, rock, sand and even in Port Silt Loam- Tennessee’s state soil.

We have decades of directional boring experience and have bored and installed utility pipelines under trees, under roads, under bridges, under railroad tracks and routed utility cables under waterways, lakes, rivers and even harbors.

Tennessee Horizontal Directional Boring

We use state of the art horizontal directional boring machines and experienced boring crews for commercial, residential and municipal underground utility pipe installation projects in Tennessee and beyond.

Horizontal Directional Boring (HDD) is a steerable trenchless method of installing underground pipe, conduit, or cables in a shallow arc along a prescribed bore path by using a surface-launched directional boring rig, with minimal impact to the surrounding surface area.

Pipe, conduit or cables can be made of materials such as PVC, polyethylene (HDPE), polypropylene, ductile iron, and steel as long as it can be pulled through the drilled bore hole.

To successfully install utility pipe underground in Tennessee without disturbing the surface, the HDD boring contractor creates a pilot bore along the design plan pathway then reams the pilot bore in one or more passes to a diameter suitable for the pipe product which is then pulled into the prepared bore hole in the final stage of the process.

This form of trenchless pipe boring is often better for the environment and can save property owners’ time and money by reducing the disruption costs often associated with open cut landscape, concrete and asphalt trenching.

Tennessee Utility Contractors Company

When Tennessee business, residential and municipal contractors need to extend existing utilities, water, or install conduits through heavily congested areas, Directional Boring (also referred to at times as, directional boring, directional boring, horizontal directional boring and HDD) allows underground line connections to be established without compromising landmarks, disrupting vehicle and pedestrian traffic or damaging the environment; all while requiring virtually no post installation surface restoration.

Why Choose a Directional Boring Company?

Directional Boring is a Trenchless Method For Establishing New Utility Lines

In the past, the only way to establish a new utility line was through expensive and damaging open-cut trenching. With directional boring you get the advantages of trenchless installation methods where a preexisting line is either unavailable or needs to be relocated.

Directional Boring Saves Money

A significant portion of the cost of a new utility line installation goes into digging for a new line and putting back excavated material. Achieve significant cost savings and avoid the damages that come with traditional open cut methods used to establish new utility lines.

Directional Boring Saves Time

Directional Boring not only saves money, it also reduces project completion time. Without trenches to dig or material to put back, the completion time on projects using directional boring is significantly less than with conventional open cut methods.

Tennessee Auger Boring Companies

While horizontal directional boring costs per foot are often the most economical method for placing pipes underground; Tennessee road boring projects like those for the Department of Transportation (DOT), municipalities and railroads like Union Pacific, BNSF and CSX often require their pipeline boring projects be auger bored, jack and bored, even pipe jacked or tunneled.

In general, these methods of pipe installation form a dry bore by means of a rotating auger with cutting tools. Casings are “jacked” forward sequentially in a cyclic process while the auger is turned while spoils are removed back.

Compared to horizontal directional boring, auger boring has limited guidance and steering which usually increases a project’s boring time and thus costs per foot.

If your Tennessee infrastructure project requires auger boring, you will need to answer the following questions:

What size casing or pipe are you installing?

How long is your auger bore crossing?

What type of subsurface conditions are you boring through?

Does your auger crossing have to be on line and grade?

Does your auger bore crossing have a high water table?

How much room do you have to set up your auger bore?

Will your road or railroad bore need a traffic management plan?

How much time do you have to complete your bore?

Will your budget allow for auger boring?

Tennessee Call Now!

Having completed thousands of directional boring projects; Tennessee Utility Contractors can through - horizontal directional boring (HDD), horizontal auger boring and hand-tunneling services - successfully bring your next Tennessee underground utility construction project in on time and within budget.

Tennessee Boring Company | Tennessee Auger Boring Companies | Tennessee Utility Contractors | Tennessee Utility Crossings | Tennessee HDD | Tennessee Horizontal Directional Boring | Tennessee Trenchless | Tennessee Underground Construction

Our services are categorized under the following codes in the state of Tennessee:

NAICS Code 238910 Boring, for building construction NAICS Codes 237990 Horizontal Directional Boring (underground cable, pipeline, sewer/water installation)

CSI Code: Common Work Results for Utilities –

33 05 23.13 Utility Horizontal Directional Boring

33 05 23 Trenchless Utility Installation

33 05 23.13 Utility Horizontal Directional Boring

33 05 23.16 Utility Pipe Jacking

33 05 23.19 Microtunneling

33 05 23.23 Utility Pipe Ramming

33 05 23.26 Utility Impact Moling

31 71 19 Tunnel Excavation by Tunnel Boring Machine

41 33 16 Boring Equipment

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