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EX.03 — Utility & Drainage Trenching

Clean Trench. Tight Depth. Right First Time.

Austin, TX & Salt Lake City, UT · 811 Locate Before Every Job

Water, sewer, storm, electrical, gas. We dig to the depth your spec requires, hand off a clean trench, and backfill with compacted material that passes inspection. Rock trenching available for Austin limestone and SLC hardpan.

GRADE TC 18" E 24" W 36" G 48" SD 60" S 84" 0 10' WATER SEWER STORM ELEC GAS TELECOM UTILITY DEPTH PROFILE — APPROX. STANDARD DEPTHS
$1.8K–$28K
Typical project range
6 types
Utility trench types we handle
811
Locate completed before every job
0
Utility strikes — ever

Six Utility Types.
One Crew. One Call.

Every utility runs at a different depth, requires different bedding, and has different inspection requirements. We know the specs for each — not just how to dig a ditch.

Water Line

Potable Water

Service line and main extensions. Trench depth per local code — typically 30–42" in Austin, 36–48" in SLC to clear frost depth. Sand bedding below and around pipe, compacted native backfill above.

Typical depth: 30–48" · Bedding: Sand/pea gravel · Inspection: Pressure test before backfill
Sewer Line

Sanitary Sewer

The deepest standard residential utility — slope-dependent depth means the far end of a long run can hit 8–10 feet. We calculate grade requirements before digging so the trench bottom is right, not "close enough." Clean-out access maintained.

Typical depth: 48–120"+ · Bedding: Sand or pea gravel · Inspection: Slope and joint inspection
Storm Drain

Storm Drainage

French drains, box culverts, catch basin connections, and perforated pipe runs for drainage management. Slope calculated from civil plan. Aggregate backfill per drainage spec — not standard compacted fill that blocks flow.

Typical depth: 24–72" · Bedding: Aggregate per spec · Inspection: Slope and outlet confirmation
Electrical

Electrical Conduit

Service laterals, sub-panel feeds, outdoor lighting runs, and EV charging conduit. Conduit bedding and warning tape per code. Narrower trench width — we use the right-sized bucket to keep disturbance minimal on finished landscapes.

Typical depth: 18–24" direct burial, 12" in conduit · Bedding: Sand · Warning tape: Required 12" above
Gas Line

Natural Gas

Service line extension and reroutes for new construction and additions. We trench to spec and coordinate with your gas sub for backfill sequencing — gas line inspection has to happen before we close the trench. No assumptions on timing.

Typical depth: 18–48" · Bedding: Native or sand · Inspection: Pressure test before backfill
Telecom / Data

Conduit & Low Voltage

Fiber, coax, and data conduit runs for new construction and site improvements. Shallowest standard utility — often combined with electrical trenching on the same run to avoid two mobilizations when both are needed.

Typical depth: 12–18" · Bedding: Native · Note: Can combine with electrical run

811 Isn't Optional.
It's How We Start
Every Single Job.

Utility strikes are the most preventable accident in excavation — and still happen constantly because contractors skip the locate or don't wait for marks to be confirmed. We call 811 before every job, every time, without exception. If marks aren't confirmed, we don't dig.

RULE 01
811 called minimum 72 hours before mobilization. We don't show up hoping the locates are done — we schedule mobilization around confirmation.
RULE 02
All marks photographed before breaking ground. Documentation protects you and us if a line placement disputes the marked location post-dig.
RULE 03
Hand dig within 18" of any marked utility. Machine excavation stops at the tolerance zone. Every time. Not sometimes.
RULE 04
Unmarked private utilities are your responsibility to flag. We dig what's marked. Interior lines, irrigation, and private conduit not covered by 811 need to be located and marked before we mobilize.
GRADE W G SD HAND DIG ZONE 811 CALLED FIRST TRENCH WIDTH DEPTH TO SPEC LOCATE + TOLERANCE ZONES

Trench to Backfill.
We Own the Whole Scope.

UT.01

Trench Excavation to Depth

Machine cut to specified depth and width. We use the right bucket size for the utility type — not a wide bucket that overcuts a narrow conduit run. Trench walls kept plumb for inspection and to minimize bedding material needed.

What drives cost up: Depth (sewer runs get expensive fast), rock at trench depth, long runs through finished surfaces, multiple utility types on one run.
UT.02

Rock Trenching

Austin limestone and caliche don't stop at pool shells — they show up in utility trenches too. Hydraulic hammer available for rock at trench depth. We flag rock likelihood during site walk so it's in the budget before your plumber is scheduled.

What drives cost up: Ledge rock at or above trench depth, long rock run lengths, sewer trenches where depth pushes into limestone formation. Rock trench quoted separately.
UT.03

Bedding + Pipe Zone Prep

Sand or aggregate bedding placed and screeded to specified grade before your plumber or electrician installs pipe. Initial backfill to the pipe zone placed and hand-compacted before mechanical compaction begins. We don't dump fill on top of freshly laid pipe.

What drives cost up: Imported sand or aggregate bedding (vs. native), long runs with precise grade requirements, multiple utility types requiring different bedding materials.
UT.04

Compacted Backfill + Grade Restore

Mechanical compaction in lifts above the pipe zone — not a single dump-and-roll pass. Surface grade restored to match adjacent area. Pavement, landscaping, and hardscape restoration quoted separately if required — we don't do it without flagging the cost upfront.

What drives cost up: Long runs through finished surfaces, import fill required (rock spoil can't be reused as backfill), multiple lift sequences for deep trenches.

What Utility Trenching
Costs in Austin + SLC.

Trench pricing is driven by depth, length, utility type, rock conditions, and backfill requirements. These ranges are from actual Austin TX and Salt Lake City UT residential and light commercial jobs.

Utility Type / Scenario Run Length Conditions Estimated Range
Water Service Line 50–100 LF Soil $1,800 – $3,500
Water Service Line 50–100 LF Caliche / rock $3,500 – $7,000
Sewer Lateral 50–80 LF Soil, standard depth $2,500 – $5,000
Sewer Lateral — Deep 50–80 LF 6–10 ft depth, rock $6,000 – $14,000
Storm Drain / French Drain 100–200 LF Soil, aggregate backfill $3,200 – $7,500
Electrical Conduit 100–200 LF Soil, 18–24" depth $2,000 – $4,500
Multi-Utility Run 100–150 LF Water + sewer + electric $6,500 – $14,000
Pool Equipment Pad Trench 30–60 LF Any $1,800 – $5,500
Commercial Site Utility 200–500 LF Mixed conditions $9,000 – $28,000
Rock adds significantly to any trench job — especially sewer runs where depth forces you deeper into limestone. We flag it on site walk before your plumber locks in a schedule. Get a quote before you commit your trade subs to a start date.

Trench Work for the
Trades That Need It Done Right.

General Contractors

One Sub for the Whole Trench Scope

We handle excavation, bedding prep, and compacted backfill — your plumber and electrician step in for install, then we close the trench. One coordination point instead of three separate subs and a compaction contractor.

Pool Builders

Equipment Pad + Plumbing Trench

Pool equipment trench from shell to pad is one of the most skipped items in pool excavation — and one of the most common sources of schedule delay. We run it at the same time as the shell dig. Already quoted, already on-site.

Plumbers + Electricians

The Trench Is Ready When You Arrive

We coordinate mobilization so the trench is open, bedding is set, and the pipe zone is clean when your crew shows up. No waiting on an excavator that ran late. Backfill sequenced around your inspection — not ours.

What Contractors Ask
About Trenching.

Do you handle the 811 locate or does the contractor?

We call 811 on every job — it's our standard operating procedure, not something we leave to the GC. We schedule our mobilization around locate confirmation, not before it. Private utilities (irrigation, interior lines) need to be marked by the owner before we arrive.

Can you trench through rock without a separate mobilization?

Yes. Hydraulic hammer is on our excavator when conditions call for it. We assess rock likelihood on site walk and come prepared — not after the standard bucket fails at 3 feet. Rock trench cost is quoted separately from soil trench when we identify it.

Do you do the backfill or just the excavation?

Both. We stay on-site through bedding, installation window, and lift-by-lift compacted backfill. We don't dig and leave an open trench for someone else to close. The full scope — trench to grade-restored — is one quote from us.

How do you handle inspection sequencing?

We don't backfill until your inspector and the installing sub have signed off. We coordinate timing explicitly — not "call us when you're ready." Backfill sequencing is confirmed before we mobilize so nobody's waiting on the wrong trade.

Can you combine multiple utility types in one mobilization?

Yes — and it's usually more cost-effective than separate mobilizations. Water, electrical, and telecom often share a corridor. We quote combined runs at a lower per-linear-foot rate than separate jobs. Confirm all utility types before we quote.

What about trench safety for deep sewer runs?

Trenches over 5 feet require a protective system per OSHA — sloping, shoring, or a trench box. We come with a trench box for any sewer run expected to exceed 5 feet. It's in the quote, not an afterthought when the inspector shows up.

Tell Us the Run.
We'll Give You the Number.

Utility type, approximate length, and depth. That's all we need to give you a quote range. Site walk confirms it.

Austin, TX · Salt Lake City, UT · Licensed + Insured