



Some job sites just don't cooperate. The mixer can't get close, the terrain is steep or tight, and suddenly you've got a real problem on your hands. That's exactly the kind of situation where a concrete line pump setup earns its keep.
This Bear Lake job is a good example. The access road winds through trees and rough terrain - not exactly mixer-friendly territory. Instead of trying to force a truck into a spot it couldn't safely reach, we ran the line out to where the concrete needed to go. Simple solution. Clean result.
Line pumping works by connecting a flexible hose from the pump to the pour location, letting us place concrete across distances and around obstacles that would otherwise shut a job down. The setup runs across the reinforced slab prep you can see here, with rebar grid already in place and ready to receive the pour. Everything staged, everything ready.
What we love about this kind of work is that it keeps your project moving. No delays waiting on a workaround. No compromise on where the concrete ends up. We get it there, and the job stays on schedule.
Bear Lake views are a nice bonus - but reliable concrete placement is the real win here. Whether your site is tight, elevated, or just plain awkward, a solid line pump setup is usually the answer.