Getting to your land — and moving around on it — starts with a proper road. Lindner Land Services builds and grades access roads for rural and ranch properties throughout the Giddings area and across Central Texas. Whether you’re cutting a new road through undeveloped land or improving an existing track, we build roads that hold up.
WHAT WE DO
What Access Road Construction Involves
Access road construction on rural property typically involves clearing the path, grading the soil to establish a proper base and drainage slope, and compacting the surface to support vehicle traffic. Depending on the terrain and the level of use the road needs to support, this might also include placing a gravel or base material layer and installing culverts at low points to manage drainage.
A poorly graded road washes out, gets muddy, and causes ruts that get worse every time it rains. A properly built road drains correctly and stays passable year-round.
WHO NEEDS AN ACCESS ROAD?
When You Need an Access Road
Ranch owners adding a new entrance or running a road to a back pasture, homeowners building on rural land who need a construction road, hunters accessing remote areas of their property, and landowners who’ve dealt with muddy or washed-out paths for too long all come to us for road work. If you need to get there reliably, you need a proper road.
THE PROCESS
How We Build It
We start by identifying the route with you — where the road needs to go, what terrain it has to cross, and what it needs to support. We then clear the corridor, grade the soil to establish proper crown and drainage, compact the base, and add culverts as needed at drainage crossings. We account for run-off from day one so the road doesn’t wash the first time it rains hard.
Giddings, College Station, Bryan & Beyond
We construct access roads throughout Central Texas including Giddings, College Station, Bryan, Hearne, Caldwell, Navasota, Brenham, Smithville, La Grange, Round Top, Rockdale, Anderson, Bellville, and the surrounding region.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do you put gravel down, or just grade the soil?
It depends on the project and what you’re asking the road to support. A well-graded road over solid native soil can serve light traffic without gravel. For heavier use or softer soils, a base material or gravel layer makes a real difference. We’ll let you know what we think makes sense for your situation.
How wide do you typically build the road?
Standard rural access roads are generally sized to allow vehicle passage comfortably, with some variation depending on whether you need two-way traffic or turnaround space. We can build to the width you need. Let us know what kinds of vehicles and equipment need to use it.
Can you run a road through wooded or brushy areas?
Yes. We clear the corridor as part of the road building process, so starting in dense vegetation is not a problem. We handle the clearing and the road work as one job.
Do you install culverts?
Yes. Culverts at drainage crossings are a key part of building a road that lasts. We identify the low points and drainage paths during planning and install appropriately sized culverts to keep water moving under the road rather than across it.
How long does it take to build an access road?
Depends entirely on the length, the terrain, and how much clearing is involved. A short rural entrance road can be done in a day or two. A longer road through challenging terrain takes more time. We’ll give you an honest estimate on time when we see the property.
CTA: Call 979-366-3127 for a Free Access Road Estimate Contact Us!