Service area — Lebanon
From the older neighborhoods around the square to the subdivisions filling in along Highway 109, Lebanon has two kinds of drainage problems — and we fix both.
Lebanon's drainage calls split cleanly in two. The established neighborhoods have decades-old grading that has settled, clay that has compacted, and gutters draining beside foundations that were never meant to take that water. The new construction — especially along the Highway 109 corridor and the growth pushing toward I-40 — has the opposite problem: lots graded to pass inspection on a dry week, sitting on stripped clay that sheds every storm onto whoever is downhill.
Both end the same way: standing water, soggy yards, wet crawl spaces, and erosion cutting toward something expensive. And both have the same category of fix — intercept the water, give it a route, and discharge it legally.
East and south of town — out toward Watertown, Norene, and Tuckers Crossroads — the calls change: flooded gravel driveways, failed culverts, ponding around barns and outbuildings, and long fence lines eroding along field edges. Rural drainage is mostly about moving larger volumes across longer runs, and the free evaluation works the same way: we walk it, ideally right after rain, and quote the whole fix at a fixed price.
Small residential drainage work typically doesn't need a permit, but projects that change grading near property lines or alter how stormwater leaves your lot can. Verification with the city or county is part of every quote — you'll never find out about a requirement after the machines show up.
Free site walk anywhere in Lebanon — in town, the 109 corridor, or the acreage beyond it.
Request a free evaluation