Concrete Contractor in Panhandle, TX
Concrete work for the town of Panhandle and Carson County — driveways, shop slabs, ag foundations, and residential pours across the eastern Panhandle.
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Panhandle, TX + Carson County
Panhandle, Texas (the town, not the region) sits 28 miles northeast of central Amarillo along US-60 and is the seat of Carson County. It's small — around 2,600 residents in town, more spread across the county — but the concrete work here is real: rural residential, agricultural, and oil-services pours across Carson County make up steady commercial demand.
Carson County is one of the most active oil-and-gas counties in the Texas Panhandle. The commercial-concrete cluster here (well pads, tank battery containment, service company yards) drives industrial concrete demand year-round.
What We Do in Panhandle
- Residential driveways — mostly rural, longer runs, thicker pours for ag-vehicle loads
- Shop and barn slabs — 6″–8″ reinforced pours for ag maintenance buildings, welding shops, equipment storage
- Ag foundations — feed pad slabs, grain bin foundations, silo pads, cattle chute pads
- Oil-services concrete — well-pad site concrete, containment pads, tank battery berms
- Town residential — patios, sidewalks, foundations inside the town of Panhandle
- Commercial — retail pads along US-60 and FM-207
Agricultural Concrete Specifics
Ag concrete is different. Load conditions are heavier (equipment weights and vibrations), chemistry is worse (manure, urine, feed acids, silage acids all attack concrete surface), and durability requirements are longer (30–40 year expected life vs residential's 30-year).
- Feed pad concrete: 6″ pours, 4,500 PSI, air-entrained, sealed, sloped to drain
- Silo pads: engineered per structural loads, typically 8″–12″ with heavy rebar
- Grain bin foundations: ring-wall foundations with anchor-bolted center pad
- Cattle handling chute pads: textured surface for grip, sloped for drainage
- Livestock building floors: high slope to drain, sealed with agricultural-grade epoxy for cleanability
Oil-Services in Carson County
- Well-pad concrete aprons — around wellhead, separator, and heater-treater
- Tank battery secondary containment — TCEQ Chapter 336 compliant berms and liners
- Service yard slabs — pump-truck bays, coil-tubing yards, fluid storage
- Compressor station pads — vibration-designed for reciprocating compressors
Safety compliance: OSHA 10/30 cards on crew, site-specific orientations, drug testing per operator policy, PPE at all times.
Permitting
- Inside town limits: Panhandle city permits, typical residential/commercial process
- County (outside town limits): Carson County OSSF office handles septic + drainfield coordination
- Oil-and-gas sites: operator's site-specific safety plan governs, plus TCEQ compliance
Pricing & Scheduling
| Work | Range |
|---|---|
| Rural driveways | $8–$15/sqft (length-dependent) |
| Ag shop slab (30×40 6″) | $8,500–$14,000 |
| Feed pad concrete | $10–$18/sqft with sealer |
| Well-pad concrete | Quoted from engineering |
| Standard residential (in-town) | $2,880–$10,000 |
Panhandle is 28 miles northeast of Amarillo — a 35-minute drive on US-60. Same 1–3 week lead time for residential, 3–8 weeks for large residential or commercial foundations. No additional truck-time surcharge inside the 40-mile radius.
Amarillo ready-mix suppliers deliver into Carson County reliably. Larger pours (>50 cy) get multi-truck sequencing worked out in advance. For very large or remote pours (>200 cy), we sometimes work with plants outside Amarillo for logistics.
Do you serve the town of Panhandle and Carson County?
Yes, both.
Do you pour oil-services concrete?
Yes, with the safety compliance operators require.
Do you do ag foundations (silos, grain bins)?
Yes, per engineering.
Can I get a shop slab poured this fall?
Depends on schedule — call for lead time.
What safety certifications does your crew hold?
OSHA 10/30 as required, site-specific orientations, standard PPE.