Franklin runs from a protected historic downtown to some of the fastest-growing master-planned communities in Tennessee. We pour both — careful, code-sensitive work downtown and high-volume custom foundations out in Westhaven, Berry Farms, and beyond.
Franklin is two markets at once: a protected historic district where work is careful and reviewed, and a ring of fast-growing custom and master-planned communities. We pour across both, about 21 miles south of Nashville — yes, south.
Williamson County's terrain here is rolling Central Basin: limestone bedrock under cherty clay soils, with the Harpeth River winding through. The hills mean stepped footers and grading; the river bottoms mean a few sites with deeper soils and higher water. Rock on deep footings is common across the county.
Downtown Franklin's historic district calls for careful, low-impact work and sensitivity to existing structures and streetscape. The growth communities — Westhaven, Berry Farms, Ladd Park, McKay's Mill — are high-volume custom and semi-custom foundations where we coordinate with builders and engineers. We do both with the same crew.
The same mix behaves differently on different ground. Here is what we plan for when we pour in Franklin — and why generic "national average" concrete advice gets people in trouble here.
Franklin's rolling Williamson County ground is limestone under cherty clay, with the Harpeth River corridor adding deeper, wetter bottomland on some sites. Rock on deep footers is common; we verify bearing per site.
Most of Franklin drains well, but Harpeth-adjacent sites need drainage planning and attention to the water table. Frost depth runs 12–16"; footings step the grade to stay below it.
Downtown work is tight, careful, and review-heavy; the growth communities are open greenfield lots. We adjust crew size, access, and protection to which Franklin you're building in.
Franklin runs its own building department with historic-district review downtown. We handle permits and inspections and respect the extra review historic work requires.
Franklin spans high-volume custom foundations in the growth communities and careful, decorative-grade flatwork in the historic core.
Custom and semi-custom foundation slabs across Westhaven, Berry Farms, Ladd Park and the growth communities.
See the spec → 02 / ServiceStepped, engineered footers on Franklin's rolling Williamson County lots.
See the spec → 07 / ServiceStamped and stained flatwork sensitive to the historic district's streetscape and finishes.
See the spec → 01 / ServiceDriveways and motor courts for new custom homes and careful replacements downtown.
See the spec →A sample of the Franklin subdivisions, roads, and pockets we've worked — not a limit. If you're nearby, we're nearby.
The questions Franklin builders and homeowners ask us most.
South — about 21 miles south, with Brentwood between the two. It's a common mix-up, but it matters for drive time and scheduling. We're out to Franklin daily regardless.
Yes, and we treat it accordingly — careful, low-impact pours, protection of adjacent historic structures and streetscape, and the extra review the district requires. Decorative and replacement flatwork downtown is some of our most detail-sensitive work.
Yes. The growth communities run on tight builder schedules, and we size crews and sequence pours to hit them — footings, slabs, and flatwork on the builder's calendar.
The City of Franklin's building department, with historic-district review downtown. We handle the permit and inspections and build the extra review time into the schedule on historic work.