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Bulkhead Contractors on Channel Lake, IL

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Last Updated: June 2026 — current Channel Lake bulkhead construction practices.

Channel Lake Bulkhead Contractors

Bulkhead Repair, Replacement & Construction on Channel Lake, IL

Shore Protect Construction provides bulkhead repair on Channel Lake, bulkhead replacement, and new bulkhead construction for waterfront properties across Channel Lake and Lake County. We build shoreline protection systems for Channel Lake banks, Lake Catherine, and rural waterway lots affected by erosion, Chain O'Lakes glacial till and sandy clay soil movement, and water pressure. Shore Protect Construction provides bulkhead repair, replacement, and new construction on Channel Lake, IL for Channel Lake, Lake Catherine, and Lake County waterfront properties. Walls are engineered for Chain O'Lakes glacial soils with 8-12 ft embedment and 6-8 ft tie-rod spacing. USACE/IEPA permits handled.

Services: repair or full replacement depending on structural condition.
Materials: vinyl, steel, and wood bulkhead systems selected based on site conditions.
Local expertise: designed for Chain O'Lakes glacial till and sandy clay soils, lake dynamics and seasonal flood cycles, and USACE/IEPA-regulated areas.

View Channel Lake bulkhead cost →  |  Call 281-501-7940  |  Get Free Estimate

Channel Lake bulkhead contractors: We provide bulkhead repair, replacement, and new construction for waterfront properties. Systems are designed to handle Chain O'Lakes glacial till and sandy clay soil pressure, water movement, and erosion along Channel Lake banks, Lake Catherine, and rural waterway lots. This page is designed for Channel Lake waterfront property owners, HOAs, and developers planning bulkhead repair, replacement, or shoreline construction projects. Experienced Channel Lake bulkhead contractors working with Chain O'Lakes glacial till and sandy clay soils, lake dynamics and seasonal flood cycles, and USACE/IEPA permit requirements. on Channel Lake, bulkhead systems are designed to resist Chain O'Lakes glacial till and sandy clay soil pressure, water movement, and erosion. Marine-grade vinyl is the most common material for long-term durability on open-water lots, while timber, steel, and concrete are selected based on shoreline conditions and structural requirements.

Channel Lake bulkheads start at $150/ft (wood) to $350/ft (concrete) installed. See full pricing breakdown →

Channel Lake bulkhead contractors: Repair, replacement, and new construction for waterfront properties. Built for Chain O'Lakes glacial till and sandy clay soils, erosion, and lake dynamics and seasonal flood cycles.

Key Takeaways
  • Bulkheads are used for typical shoreline stabilization, but in areas with stronger wave energy or open-water exposure, a seawall construction system may be required to handle higher hydraulic forces.
  • We build in strict accordance with U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Chicago District) and Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA) requirements. Our team assists clients in preparing necessary technical data for successful Lake County permit approval.
  • Properly installed vinyl bulkheads last 40–50 years in the Channel Lake climate with minimal maintenance.
  • Planning your budget? Use our Channel Lake bulkhead cost guide →
  • Free on-site estimates — call 281-501-7940 or submit the form.
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Why Bulkheads Are Critical for Channel Lake Waterfront Properties

Lake County waterfront properties contend with Channel Lake water energy, seasonal flooding that saturates lake-margin glacial soils, and active bank erosion that can strip unprotected shores faster than most property owners anticipate.

Ice-Push Damage & Boat-Wake Erosion

Winter ice shove and summer boat-wake erosion on Channel Lake's Chain O'Lakes frontage steadily fatigue timber walls, with cap-board fractures and panel displacement showing first.

River Current & Flood Scouring

The Channel Lake carries high water volumes during wet seasons and actively scours unprotected banks — particularly at the waterline where current velocity is concentrated.

Army Corps & IEPA Authorization

Work near Channel Lake or its tributaries may require USACE and IEPA review before construction can legally proceed.

Lake County lake banks demand more than a basic wall — water energy, saturated soils, seasonal flood pressure, and federal waterway regulations each shape how a bulkhead must be designed to hold long-term.

Ice-Push Pressure & Lake-Margin Saturation

The Channel Lake floodplain around Channel Lake consists primarily of Chain O'Lakes glacial till and sandy clay deposited over generations of flood cycles. These soils drain poorly, remain saturated for extended periods after high-water events, and generate significant lateral pressure against shoreline structures. Unlike upland clay, Chain O'Lakes glacial soil has low bearing capacity and limited cohesion — it migrates through gaps, undercuts wall toe embedment, and amplifies load against tie-rods and anchor systems not specifically designed for these conditions. A bulkhead in Lake County must account for deeper embedment than typical upland installations, closer anchor spacing, and geotextile fabric to prevent soil migration even after floodwaters recede.

Channel Lake Flow, Bank Scour & Flood Cycles

Channel Lake is a central component of the Chain O'Lakes system, the largest concentration of natural lakes in Illinois, regularly reaching flood or high-water stage in Lake County during heavy rain or storm events. High-water events deliver sustained force against bank-side structures, with scour concentrated at the waterline where flow or wave energy is highest. Once the bank begins eroding at the waterline, the process accelerates — undercutting occurs below the surface, and visible failure often lags behind actual structural damage. Properties on exposed shorelines, outer-bend meanders, or open-fetch frontage face the most aggressive erosion; even sheltered inlets experience periodic flood scouring. Structures must be designed to handle both sustained load and the pressure cycle of rising and falling water stages.

USACE Section 404/10 & IEPA Coordination

Channel Lake is classified as a navigable or jurisdictional waterway under federal authority, placing it under Army Corps of Engineers oversight through the Chicago District. Work that affects the ordinary high-water mark, wetlands, or adjacent floodplain areas typically requires a Section 404 permit (fill in waters of the US) and/or a Section 10 permit (work in navigable waters). Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA) water quality certification may also be required. Scope, location, and proximity to the main channel determine which permits apply. Starting the permitting process before mobilization planning prevents the most common scheduling delays.

Property Value & Long-Term Protection

A failing shoreline can reduce usable land, damage nearby improvements, and create larger structural problems over time. Stabilizing the bank early protects both property value and long-term site usability.

Key Takeaway: on Channel Lake, a bulkhead designed without accounting for Channel Lake water energy, saturated Chain O'Lakes lake-margin soil pressure, flood cycles, and USACE/IEPA permit requirements will cost significantly more to repair or replace than one built correctly from the outset.

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Bulkhead Materials for Channel Lake Conditions

Selecting the right material for a Lake County shoreline means evaluating lake energy, bank height, flood exposure, and long-term durability requirements before choosing between vinyl, timber, steel, or concrete.

Vinyl Sheet Pile — Best for Active Shorelines

The preferred choice for active Channel Lake banks where water energy, flood force, and scour demand maximum durability with minimal long-term maintenance.

CCA Timber — Freshwater Value Option

A practical freshwater option for calmer coves, creek inlets, and lower-energy waterway lots where wave and flow loads are limited.

Steel & Concrete — Heavy-Load Sites

Specified for commercial waterfront or high-load sites requiring deep structural embedment and maximum load capacity.

Bulkhead durability along Channel Lake depends on how well the installation accounts for water energy, saturated soil pressure, flood cycles, and the specific demands of Chain O'Lakes lake-margin conditions.


Installation Depth & Embedment

Panels are typically driven 8–12 feet below grade in Lake County's soft Chain O'Lakes glacial soils to resist scour during Channel Lake high-water events and prevent undermining at the wall toe.

Tie-Rod & Anchor System

Bulkheads are stabilized using galvanized tie-rods connected to buried deadman anchors, spaced every 6–8 feet to counteract lateral soil pressure.

Geotextile & Soil Retention

Filter fabric is installed behind the wall to prevent soil migration while allowing water drainage, maintaining long-term stability.

Material Selection by Site Conditions

Vinyl is the preferred material for active lake frontage; CCA timber serves calmer freshwater inlets and coves; steel or concrete is specified for commercial sites or locations with high structural load requirements.

Choosing the Right Material for Channel Lake

Solution Design Life Corrosion Resistance Application
Marine-Grade Vinyl Sheet Pile 40–50 Years Maximum Active Channel Lake banks and high-energy waterways in Lake County — the preferred long-term solution for active lake frontage.
CCA Wood (AWPA UC5B/UC5C, 2.5 pcf) 20–30 Years Moderate Freshwater lakes and low-salinity canals only.
Steel Sheet Pile (HP10×42 / HP12×53) 30–50 Years High (with coating) Commercial shorelines and high-load sites requiring deep structural support.
Concrete (cast-in-place) 50+ Years Very High High-load waterfront, commercial sites, and elevated bank locations requiring deep structural support.
Riprap Rock Armor 20–40 Years Maximum Low-profile erosion control along Channel Lake curves, gradual bank slopes, and inlet edges.

The Bottom Line: On Lake County's active waterways, vinyl sheet pile delivers the best long-term combination of water-energy resistance and service life; CCA timber is a practical choice for calmer freshwater coves and low-energy inlets. Learn more about seawall and steel construction →

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Signs Your Bulkhead Needs Repair or Replacement

Bulkhead failure usually starts with small visible clues: movement, gaps, soil loss, or material damage. Catching these signs early can prevent a minor repair from becoming a full replacement.

Leaning or Bowing Panels

The wall is taking more lateral pressure than it can safely resist — often worsened by saturated lake-margin glacial soils after flooding.

Gaps at Cap Board or Waterline

Openings allow water and fine Chain O'Lakes glacial soil to migrate behind the wall, rapidly undermining the backfill zone.

Sinkholes or Voids Near the Wall

Ground depressions behind the bulkhead typically indicate soil is washing out — a common result of Channel Lake flood cycles.

Rust, Rot, or Cracked Panels

Visible material damage can indicate deeper structural weakness below the waterline.

Along Channel Lake and Lake County waterways, small bulkhead problems can worsen rapidly because water energy, saturated Chain O'Lakes glacial soil, and seasonal flood pressure act together. The central decision is whether reinforcing the existing wall is sufficient or whether full replacement offers the safer long-term outcome.

Bulkhead Repair vs Replacement — Quick Guide

  • Repair: minor damage, stable wall, limited soil loss
  • Replace: leaning, bowing, structural failure, sinkholes

Repair May Be Enough

Repair is appropriate when damage is localized and the main wall alignment remains stable and structurally sound.

  • Minor leaning that can be corrected with anchor or tie-rod adjustment.
  • Isolated cap board, waler, or panel damage with no underlying wall movement.
  • Limited soil loss that can be corrected with filter fabric and backfill repair.

Replacement Is Usually Safer

Full replacement is the better option when failure is widespread or the wall has lost its capacity to resist water pressure and soil movement.

  • Systematic bowing, buckling, or wall displacement along multiple sections.
  • Major voids, sinkholes, or repeated soil washout behind the structure.
  • Older walls with widespread rot, corrosion, or panel cracking throughout.

Why Delays Increase Cost

Once soil begins moving behind the wall, damage can spread beyond the bulkhead itself. Waiting too long can affect nearby patios, fences, docks, landscaping, or foundations close to the shoreline.

Key Takeaway: Schedule an assessment when you see leaning, gaps, sinkholes, rust, rot, or cracked panels. A clear repair-vs-replacement recommendation helps avoid paying for short-term fixes that do not solve the underlying problem.

After the site evaluation, we can also provide a written estimate based on the repair or replacement scope.

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Our Channel Lake Bulkhead Construction Process

Lake County bulkhead projects follow a clear sequence: site inspection, scope review, USACE and IEPA permit coordination, material selection for exposure, panel driving to design depth, anchoring, backfill, and geotextile.

1. Site Review & Scope

We check bank conditions, water exposure, wall failure, access from land or water, depth, and nearby regulated waterway corridors.

2. Permitting & Material Planning

We define USACE and IEPA requirements by waterway, scope, and location, then prepare permit documents to help avoid schedule gaps.

3. Mobilization & Installation

Crews stage equipment, remove failed sections if needed, then drive panels to the required depth for stable bank retention.

4. Anchoring, Backfill & Finish

Tie-rods, deadman anchors, filter fabric, cap boards, and backfill complete the bulkhead system.

Lake County bulkhead projects follow a structured sequence: bank inspection and scope assessment, permit coordination with Army Corps and IEPA, material selection based on exposure, panel installation to required depth, anchoring, and backfill with geotextile drainage protection.

A reliable bulkhead on Channel Lake requires more than material selection. Every phase — site review, permit planning, installation sequencing, anchoring, and drainage management — must account for water energy, saturated soil, and flood-stage pressure cycles.

1. Site Review & Scope

We evaluate bank conditions, water exposure, existing wall failure, equipment access from land or water, depth along the structure, and proximity to federally regulated waterway corridors. We walk the bank, measure exposure and flood risk relative to the channel, confirm equipment staging access from land or water, and verify whether the project boundary falls within a federally regulated waterway corridor before quoting scope or cost.

2. Design, Permits & Material Planning

We identify applicable USACE Section 404/10 and IEPA requirements based on waterway type, project scope, and site location, and prepare the documentation needed to move permits forward without scheduling gaps. The wall system is engineered around site-specific data: material type chosen for water energy and bank height; embedment depth for Chain O'Lakes glacial soil conditions; anchor spacing calibrated to expected lateral loads; and geotextile fabric specification.

3. Mobilization, Panel Driving & Alignment

Crews stage equipment, remove failed sections if needed, then drive panels to the required embedment depth in Lake County's Chain O'Lakes glacial soils. Panels are kept plumb so the wall can resist water energy, soil pressure, and flood load over time, providing stable bank retention.

4. Anchors, Filter Fabric, Backfill & Finish

Tie-rods and deadman anchors lock the wall against lateral soil pressure. Geotextile filter fabric prevents fine glacial silty particles from migrating through the structure while allowing hydrostatic drainage, which is critical during and after Channel Lake flood recessions. Cap boards and engineered backfill complete the bulkhead system.

Key Takeaway: A Lake County bulkhead built in proper sequence — site review, permit coordination, installation to correct embedment, anchoring, and drainage — handles Channel Lake flood cycles and Chain O'Lakes glacial soil pressure far better than one assembled without accounting for these conditions from the start.

Need structural piling only? See our pile driving services.

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How a Bulkhead Protects Waterfront Property Value

A sound bulkhead helps preserve usable land, reduce erosion risk, and support buyer confidence during waterfront property inspections.

Preserves Usable Land

Channel Lake bank erosion can remove feet of land annually. A bulkhead holds the shoreline edge in place and stops ongoing loss before it reaches structures or dock access.

Reduces Inspection Concerns

A failing shoreline wall is a negotiating point for buyers. A maintained bulkhead removes uncertainty from the waterfront during due diligence.

Creates a Documented Improvement

Project records, material specs, and permit information can help explain the value of the shoreline work.

Waterfront value in Lake County depends on more than location. Bank stability, usable land area, drainage performance, and visible maintenance condition all influence how buyers, appraisers, and lenders evaluate a waterfront property.

Land Preservation

Channel Lake erosion can steadily reduce usable yard space and threaten nearby improvements. A properly built bulkhead stops the bank from receding and protects the investment in structures and landscaping near the water.

Better Buyer Confidence

Buyers and inspectors pay close attention to leaning walls, sinkholes, soil loss, and visible deterioration on waterfront properties. A stable, maintained bulkhead reduces uncertainty during property due diligence.

More Functional Waterfront Space

A defined bank edge enables cleaner landscaping, safer access to the water, dock installations, and more productive use of the area between structures and the lake.

Long-Term Cost Control

Addressing bank erosion early in Lake County prevents larger reconstruction costs later, especially when soil loss begins reaching docks, driveways, foundations, or other improvements close to the shoreline.

Key Takeaway: A bulkhead protects property value by preserving land, reducing shoreline risk, improving waterfront usability, and documenting a significant improvement to the property record.

Estimate Icon

Get a Free Bulkhead Estimate on Channel Lake

We provide free on-site bulkhead assessments for waterfront properties across Lake County — Channel Lake frontage, Lake Catherine, Lake Catherine, and rural waterway lots. We inspect conditions, review scope, and deliver clear pricing before any commitment.

Free On-Site Inspection

We assess bank stability, shoreline erosion, access conditions, and existing wall structural issues at no charge.

Local Channel Lake Expertise

We understand Channel Lake soil behavior, seasonal flood patterns, Chain O'Lakes lake-margin conditions, and USACE and IEPA permit requirements specific to Lake County waterways.

Clear Scope & Pricing

You receive practical repair or replacement recommendations, material options, and transparent project cost guidance.

We serve waterfront properties across Lake County and adjacent areas, including Channel Lake frontage, Lake Catherine, Lake Catherine, and rural shoreline lots throughout Lake, McHenry counties.

Areas We Serve

Antioch, Lake Catherine, Fox Lake, Lake Villa, Spring Grove, and surrounding Lake County waterfront communities, as well as nearby Lake and McHenry County shoreline properties.

What You Receive

Your estimate includes a shoreline review, repair vs. replacement recommendation, material options suited to your waterway, expected timeline, and clear project cost guidance.

Fast Response

We respond to Lake County inquiries quickly and help identify whether the project needs targeted repair, full replacement, or a complete new bulkhead system designed for your specific waterway conditions.

Call or text 281-501-7940 to schedule a free on-site inspection, or use the form below. To compare material costs and installation pricing before your visit, review our Channel Lake bulkhead pricing guide.

Bulkhead Construction FAQ — Channel Lake, IL

This FAQ covers bulkhead repair, replacement, material selection, permit requirements, and shoreline protection for Channel Lake waterfront properties. It answers the most common questions for Channel Lake frontage, Lake Catherine, Lake Catherine, and rural waterway lots across Lake County.

Common warning signs include leaning panels, gaps near the cap board, sinkholes behind the wall, soil erosion, visible cracks, rust, rot, and water seepage.

These issues typically mean the bulkhead is no longer restraining soil correctly or has begun losing structural capacity. Along Channel Lake in Lake County, Chain O'Lakes spring high-water peaks combined with summer boat-wake fatigue combined with Chain O'Lakes glacial soil movement can escalate minor gaps or slight lean into major failure within a single high-water period.

Early inspection helps determine whether the wall can be repaired or whether full replacement is the safer long-term solution.

Replacement is usually the better option when the wall is leaning heavily, bowing, collapsing, or showing widespread rot, corrosion, or major soil loss behind the structure.

If repeated repairs are becoming expensive, or repair costs approach 50% of replacement cost, full replacement is often the smarter investment.

A new bulkhead also improves long-term shoreline stability and reduces future maintenance risk.

Bulkhead material specification for Channel Lake on the Chain O'Lakes starts with ice-shove load, summer boat-wake exposure, and soil-bearing capacity in glacial till. Vinyl sheet pile is the preferred material for Channel Lake's exposed Chain O'Lakes lots — UV-stable, corrosion-free, and engineered for repeated ice and wave fatigue.

Treated timber works well on low-fetch coves in Channel Lake where boat traffic is limited, but more exposed Chain O'Lakes shorelines typically warrant vinyl for long-term durability.

The best material depends on water type, soil movement, and expected service life—not just initial cost.

Design life depends on material. On Lake County waterways, marine-grade vinyl sheet pile typically delivers 40-50 years of service; CCA-treated timber (AWPA UC5B/UC5C, 2.5 pcf) lasts 20-30 years.

Steel sheet pile (HP10x42 / HP12x53) reaches 30-50 years; cast-in-place concrete bulkheads can exceed 50 years; and riprap rock armor lasts 20-40 years.

Service life along Channel Lake depends on correct embedment depth (typically 8-10 ft below grade in Chain O'Lakes glacial soils), tie-rod and deadman anchor spacing every 6-8 ft, and geotextile fabric to prevent soil migration during spring melt, ice-out, and saturated freeze-thaw cycles.

Channel Lake bulkhead construction follows a four-phase process. Phase 1 - site review: walk the bank, measure water exposure and flood risk relative to Channel Lake, confirm equipment staging access, and identify whether the project falls within a federally regulated waterway corridor.

Phase 2 - design and permitting: select material for water energy and bank height, calibrate embedment depth for Chain O'Lakes glacial soil, set anchor spacing for expected lateral loads, specify geotextile fabric, and prepare USACE Section 404/10 and IEPA documentation.

Phase 3 - construction: drive panels to required embedment depth, install tie-rods and deadman anchors at 6-8 ft spacing, place geotextile filter fabric to prevent lake-margin silt and sand from washing through the wall joints while allowing hydrostatic drainage.

Phase 4 - backfill and finish: backfill in lifts, restore grade, install cap board. Total timeline depends on permit lead time, weather, and site access.

Most residential Channel Lake bulkhead projects take 1–3 weeks from mobilization to backfill completion. Small repair jobs may finish in a few days, standard 80–150 ft replacements typically run 1–2 weeks, and larger or commercial projects on Channel Lake can extend to 2–4+ weeks.

Channel Lake high water during spring lake rise and the late-spring storm window may delay panel driving by a few days at a time. Permit lead time (USACE Section 404/10 review and IEPA coordination) adds 4–12 weeks before active construction starts.

Total timeline from contract signing to completed wall is typically 6–16 weeks for a residential Channel Lake project, including permit lead time and construction.

Channel Lake's Chain O'Lakes lake-margin soils — Chain O'Lakes glacial till and sandy clay — saturate quickly during Channel Lake seasonal lake-level cycling and ice-out events, applying significant lateral pressure behind any new wall.

To compensate, embedment depth typically reaches 8-10 ft below grade to anchor into competent strata, with tie-rods and deadman anchors spaced every 6–8 ft to resist saturated bank movement.

Access challenges on Channel Lake waterfront lots include narrow easements on rural parcels, steep banks, overhead utility lines, and tight equipment staging. Some Channel Lake frontage requires barge-supported installation or specialized small-equipment staging, which adds to mobilization cost.

In most cases, yes. Work near Channel Lake or its tributaries in Lake County typically requires U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Chicago District) review under Section 404 or Section 10 authority, and depending on scope and location, may also require IEPA water quality certification before construction can proceed.

Permit needs depend on the exact location, shoreline type, and scope of work. Early review helps prevent delays, redesigns, and compliance issues during construction.

Yes. A bulkhead primarily protects against shoreline erosion by holding soil in place and reducing land loss caused by waves, boat wake, and stormwater flow.

It can also help reduce minor flooding impacts by creating a stronger shoreline edge, although it is not a full flood-control system for major storm events.

For maximum protection, bulkheads are often combined with drainage improvements, riprap, or other shoreline stabilization methods.

A bulkhead is a shoreline retaining wall built to resist water pressure, erosion, and soil movement where land meets the water.

A seawall is typically designed for stronger wave energy and open-water coastal protection — see our seawall construction services for coastal and heavy wave-exposure projects.

Using the correct structure matters because each is engineered for different loads and site conditions.

To prepare a written Channel Lake bulkhead estimate, we typically need: property address or GPS coordinates of the waterfront, approximate length of bulkhead in linear feet, photos of the current shoreline and existing wall (if any), and the waterway type (Channel Lake bank, Lake Catherine, creek inlet, or rural waterway).

Recent erosion or flood history at the site is helpful, plus photos showing wall lean, soil voids, or cap-board condition for replacement projects. HOA constraints (if applicable) and access notes — barge-only staging, narrow lot, overhead utilities — affect mobilization cost.

With this information, we can usually return a written line-item estimate within 3–5 business days, plus an in-person site evaluation if needed.

Channel Lake bulkhead pricing starts at $150/ft for wood, $200/ft for vinyl, $300/ft for steel, and $350/ft for concrete. Bulkhead repair starts at $120/ft. Final pricing depends on wall height, lake access, demolition needs, and soil conditions. See full Channel Lake pricing breakdown →

Ready to Protect Your Channel Lake Shoreline?

Get a free, no-obligation on-site evaluation from Shore Protect Construction. We assess your waterway type, soil conditions, water exposure, and current wall condition before recommending a solution — then provide a clear, itemized written estimate. Call or text 281-501-7940.

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Bulkhead & Seawall projects

View completed bulkhead, seawall, riprap, and shoreline protection projects across our service areas — including bank stabilization, vinyl sheet pile installations, and timber bulkhead replacements.

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