Jireh / Service areas / Hendersonville
Service area · Sumner County · 18 mi from Nashville

Concrete in
Hendersonville.

Hendersonville wraps around Old Hickory Lake — lakefront homes, sloped waterfront lots, and a high water table that punishes lazy concrete. We pour foundations, drives, retaining, and decks built for the shoreline, not in spite of it.

SumnerCounty · City of Hendersonville
18 mi28 min from our shop
12–16"Footing frost depth
Lake homesMost-poured work here
§ Building in Hendersonville

On Old
Hickory Lake.

Hendersonville is defined by Old Hickory Lake — waterfront and water-view homes on lots that slope to the shoreline, where drainage and the water table are the whole ballgame. Lakefront concrete is its own discipline, and it's one we know.

The ground here mixes Central Basin limestone uplands with Cumberland River alluvium near the lake — deeper, wetter soils and a higher water table close to the water. Sloped waterfront lots demand retaining walls, stepped footings, and serious drainage design so a slab or wall isn't undercut by runoff or groundwater.

We pour lakefront foundation slabs with attention to the water table and vapor control, retaining walls that hold the slope with proper drainage behind them, driveways that descend to the water without becoming a hazard, and decorative pool decks and patios for the entertaining these homes are built around.

§ Local ground conditions

What the dirt under Hendersonville does to a slab.

The same mix behaves differently on different ground. Here is what we plan for when we pour in Hendersonville — and why generic "national average" concrete advice gets people in trouble here.

01 / Soil & bedrock

Uplands rock, lakeside alluvium

Hendersonville mixes limestone uplands with deeper, wetter alluvial soils near Old Hickory Lake. Bearing varies with proximity to the water — we verify it per lot rather than assume.

02 / Frost & drainage

High water table near the lake

Waterfront lots sit on a higher water table, so under-slab drainage, vapor barriers, and stone are not optional close to the shore. Frost depth runs 12–16"; water, not heave, is the main adversary here.

03 / Lots & access

Sloped waterfront lots

Lots that fall to the shoreline need retaining and stepped footings, and drives that descend safely. We design the grade and drainage so the lake stays an amenity, not a threat to the slab.

04 / Permits & inspection

City of Hendersonville

Hendersonville runs its own permitting alongside Sumner County, and shoreline work may involve additional review. We handle permits and inspections.

§ What we pour in Hendersonville

The work that
comes up most here.

Hendersonville work is shoreline-driven — lakefront foundations, retaining walls, descending drives, and decorative decks.

§ Where we work

Hendersonville neighborhoods we pour in.

A sample of the Hendersonville subdivisions, roads, and pockets we've worked — not a limit. If you're nearby, we're nearby.

Indian Lake Fairvue Plantation Walnut Hills Durham Farms Saundersville Sanders Ferry Cage's Bend Station Camp
§ Recent work near Hendersonville

Pours from the area.

J-044
Lakefront slabHendersonville · Old Hickory · 2025
J-041
Shoreline retainingHendersonville · drained wall · 2025
J-050
Pool deckHendersonville · stamped · 2024
§ Hendersonville questions

Concrete in Hendersonville,
answered.

The questions Hendersonville builders and homeowners ask us most.

My lot is on the lake with a high water table — can you build there?

Yes, and it's a Hendersonville specialty. Close to Old Hickory Lake the water table is high, so we design under-slab drainage, stone, and vapor control into the foundation rather than treating water as an afterthought. Lakefront concrete done right lasts; done lazily it fails fast.

Do I need retaining walls for my sloped waterfront lot?

Usually, yes. Lots that fall to the shoreline need retaining to create buildable, drainable space, and we pour engineered concrete retaining with proper drainage behind it so groundwater doesn't undercut it.

Can you pour a driveway that goes down to the water?

Yes — descending lakeside drives are common here. We grade them for a safe descent, broom-finish for traction, and manage where the runoff goes so the drive doesn't sheet water toward the house or the lake.

Who handles permitting in Hendersonville?

The City of Hendersonville, alongside Sumner County, and shoreline work can involve extra review. We pull the permit, handle the inspections, and build any added shoreline review into the schedule.

§ Pouring in Hendersonville?

We'd rather walk your Hendersonville site than guess.