Columbus, GA · Phenix City, AL · Harris County
Expert grading, French drains, swales, and drainage correction. We target the source — not just the symptoms.
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The Problem With Most Georgia Yards
Bowl-shaped yards, low spots, and compacted red clay prevent water from escaping your property. What starts as inconvenient pooling becomes lawn damage, foundation erosion, and eventually costly structural problems.
We inspect every property before any work begins — identifying drainage patterns, runoff paths, high and low points, and the right solution. Not every yard needs a French drain. Not every yard needs full regrading. We'll tell you exactly what yours needs.
What We Fix
Yard Regrading
Fix bowl-shaped yards and low spots that trap water. We reshape the ground to create proper slope away from your home and toward appropriate drainage paths.
French Drains
Perforated pipe surrounded by clean #57 stone and wrapped in non-woven geotextile fabric, installed at proper trench slope for reliable water removal.
Swales & Channels
Shallow graded channels that redirect surface water away from problem areas and toward appropriate discharge points. Natural-looking and effective.
Culverts
Driveway and road culvert installation and replacement for proper water passage under drives and across drainage ditches.
Harley Rake Finish Grading
Fine-grade a seedbed, smooth rough graded areas, or prepare a yard for hydroseeding. The Harley rake creates a clean, level surface at the right slope.
Erosion Control
Combine grading corrections with hydroseeding, silt fence, matting, and proper slope stabilization to stop erosion for good.
French Drains Done Right
A French drain only works if it has proper slope, the right materials, and a clear discharge point. Too many installs use wrong stone, skip the fabric, or don't have enough pitch — and they fail within a season.
What Goes Wrong
We've seen a lot of failed drainage work. Common mistakes include drains installed without enough slope (water sits and stagnates), fine gravel that clogs within months, no fabric so roots and soil infiltrate the system, and discharge points that lead back uphill or nowhere at all.
We design every drain with the entire water path in mind — from inlet to outlet. If the discharge has nowhere to go, the system won't work no matter how good the install is.
Questions
The answer depends on where the water is coming from and where it needs to go. Surface water pooling in the yard often requires regrading or swales. Water entering from a hillside or neighboring property is usually best handled with a French drain interceptor. Many properties need a combination of both. We inspect every property and tell you exactly what's needed.
Absolutely — in fact, combining grading and hydroseeding is one of the most common project types we do. After grading, the disturbed soil is perfect for hydroseeding. We finish-grade with the Harley rake to create a smooth seedbed, then apply hydroseeding immediately. This gives you proper drainage and a healthy lawn from day one.
Depth depends on the application. Surface drains collecting yard water may only be 12–18 inches deep. Interceptor drains blocking uphill water may need 24–36 inches. Drains near foundations should be deep enough to capture water before it reaches footings. We assess your specific situation and install at the appropriate depth for your soil type and drainage requirements.
Often yes. French drain trenches are narrow and targeted. We can frequently address serious drainage problems by strategically installing a drain in one location rather than regrading the entire yard. During our inspection, we look for the minimum intervention that achieves the drainage goal.