Green Hills packs high-value homes onto established, often tight lots minutes from downtown. The challenge is access and precision, not acreage — and that's exactly the kind of careful, neighbor-aware pour we're built for.
Green Hills is dense, established, and expensive — mature neighborhoods where teardowns and additions happen on lots with houses close on either side. The work is precise, and access is the whole game.
The ground is Central Basin limestone under thin soil, well-drained and stable. The harder variables are above ground: narrow lots, shared driveways, mature landscaping, and neighbors within a few feet of the pour. A clean Green Hills job is as much about logistics and protection as it is about concrete.
We pump where a truck can't fit, protect adjacent property and landscaping, cut joints tight, and keep a small, tidy footprint on the street. For the teardown-and-rebuild market here, we also handle the cutting and removal of the old slab before we pour the new foundation.
The same mix behaves differently on different ground. Here is what we plan for when we pour in Green Hills — and why generic "national average" concrete advice gets people in trouble here.
Green Hills sits on the same shallow, well-drained limestone as the rest of the basin — good bearing for slabs and footings, with rock possible on deeper excavations.
With houses close together, where water goes matters. We grade flatwork to shed cleanly toward the street or a managed point, not toward a neighbor's foundation a few feet away.
Narrow lots and shared drives mean truck access is limited. We pump, we protect, and we keep the work zone small — the difference between a clean job and an angry neighbor.
Green Hills is unincorporated Davidson County, so Metro Nashville Codes handles permits and inspections. We schedule and stand for them.
Green Hills leans residential — driveways and flatwork on tight lots, foundation slabs for teardown rebuilds and additions, plus the cutting that comes with remodels.
Tight-lot and shared-access driveways and flatwork, poured clean with the neighbors in mind.
See the spec → 03 / ServiceFoundation slabs for the teardown-and-rebuild and addition market that defines Green Hills.
See the spec → 05 / ServiceRemoval of old drives and slabs, plus renovation cutting and coring for additions.
See the spec → 07 / ServiceStamped and stained patios, walks, and courtyards for established Green Hills homes.
See the spec →A sample of the Green Hills subdivisions, roads, and pockets we've worked — not a limit. If you're nearby, we're nearby.
The questions Green Hills builders and homeowners ask us most.
Yes. Tight access is the norm in Green Hills, so we pump concrete where the mixer can't go, protect the neighbors' property, and keep the work zone small and clean. It's how we do most of our work here.
Absolutely. We saw-cut and haul off the existing slab, fix whatever failed underneath, and pour back clean. Doing both with one crew saves you a separate demo contractor.
Not if we grade it right. On tight Green Hills lots we pitch flatwork to shed toward the street or a managed drainage point — never toward an adjacent foundation. We check this before we set forms.
Spring and fall run 3–5 weeks, summer 2–3, and the off-season is often quicker. Send plans early — that's what locks your spot on the pour calendar.