Restaurant pad gas on Washington
Cased bore per operator template under paved TI.
Bartlesville, OK · Washington County
Gas line boring in Bartlesville with operator locate discipline — PE under Washington commercial and south industrial streets on shale.
Gas line boring follows operator templates — enhanced locate standoff before steel moves. Homeowner service routes through utility or assigned contractor per operator rules.
US-75 industrial feeds may combine casing and PE with engineer and operator sign-off.
Limestone does not waive locate requirements — expired tickets stop the job.
Real Washington County angles — not generic statewide copy.
Cased bore per operator template under paved TI.
Operator-assigned path to meter on rock contingency spread.
Engineer alignment with owner inspection coordination.
Steel shell before PE per operator spec.
Operator approval, locates, fusion, pressure test — no pit until paint is current.
Washington County limestone, shale, and sandstone with sandy Caney River bottoms — harder northeast profiles than red-clay OKC with river lowland groundwater on select shots.
Bartlesville bores encounter Washington County limestone, shale, and sandstone with sandy Caney River bottoms on low approaches — penetration changes quickly on south industrial pads and river-adjacent shots. Groundwater near the Caney raises buoyancy risk on long HDPE pulls. West toward the county line, tighter shale can slow penetration without correct bit selection.
Northeast Oklahoma humidity with Caney River seasonal rise — spring storms soften Washington County ROW; summer heat on long US-75 pulls toward Kansas line.
Spring storms on the Caney are Bartlesville's biggest calendar variables — saturated lowlands delay entry work briefly. Summer heat affects long US-75 pulls. Lightning holds stop rigs during severe weather. We plan bore windows around known wet seasons rather than forcing pits into unstable river banks.
City of Bartlesville Engineering, Washington County ROW, ODOT on US-75 and US-60, Caney River floodplain rules on select routes.
City of Bartlesville permits street and drive work inside limits. Washington County ROW on rural US-75 and US-60 approaches. ODOT controls state highway bores. Caney River floodplain work may need environmental review — scoped per alignment, not assumed on every quote.
Paved Washington and industrial ROW favors trenchless gas — rock excavation adds open-cut cost fast.
Operator fees, inspection, casing, soil, traffic control, testing, and emergency planning.
You share plans or describe the problem; we confirm alignment, depth, access, and which trenchless method fits Oklahoma soils.
Oklahoma One-Call ticket filed; two business days minimum before pits open unless your permit path differs. We pothole where marks conflict.
Bore plan, ODOT or city ROW permits, railroad agreements, and crossing engineering when the path leaves private property.
Compact spread for tight Edmond lots; larger HDD for I-35 or I-40 relocations — matched to length and diameter.
Steered pilot on design line, ream passes sized for your pipe or casing, fluid program tuned for clay or sand lenses.
HDPE fusion, steel casing, or multi-duct bundle pulled with tension and bend-radius monitoring.
Pressure test, mandrel, or survey records for owners, inspectors, and operators as spec requires.
Compact pits, replace sod or hardscape per scope, leave 811 ticket and locate map in your project file.
Through utility or operator-assigned contractor — we follow their ticket rules.
Required on commercial and industrial bids per operator spec.
Enhanced — no expired tickets; potholes at PSO on Washington.
Tooling review with operator before mobilization.
24/7 — Emergency dispatch statewide. Tell us entry, exit, pipe size, and county — a bore specialist calls back with cost drivers, not a flat rate.
Scope your bore path
Step 1 of 2 — path, pipe, and city first