Top Things to Know as You Update Your Corporate Electrical or Communication Lines

SalesRep-Admin • March 23, 2022

Share this article

Concrete Drill




As your company grows and changes, you understand the need to keep your facility up to date. In fact, you may currently be in the process of updating your company’s electrical or communication lines.

To make the process go smoothly, insist that your contractor uses KC Coring and Cutting to complete any of the concrete core drilling necessary to complete the process.




Please allow us to tell you about our company, so you understand the advantage of hiring KC Coring and Cutting for this specialized work.




About KC Coring and Cutting


KC Coring and Cutting is well-known in the construction, renovation, and demolition industries. We do concrete coring, concrete cutting, and concrete sawing. We have, in fact, been serving the Kansas City community for more than 40 years.




Even though our technology and techniques have advanced through the years, one thing remains the same: our goal is to provide “uncompromising quality work and top-notch customer service to every client while utilizing the highest safety standards.”




Quality and integrity are two core values of our company. Our leadership team is dedicated to high-quality training and education and the best possible safety standards. Also, we believe in old-fashioned business practices. We show up when we promise and complete the job right.




We have experience in a variety of industries.


Our company and its leadership have been serving the KC area for years. We have a lot of experience in commercial, industrial, residential, and public works projects. If it has to do with concrete or cutting concrete, we’ve seen it and done it!




Even though we have worked in the industry for decades, we arrive at each job site with a fresh set of eyes because our crews are trained to pay attention to each detail and matter of safety.




KC Coring and Cutting is committed to job site safety.


We are proud of our safety record. KC Coring and Cutting has won many industry safety awards. We employ both a full-time Safety Director and Director of Risk Control Services to ensure our crews are properly trained and following best practices.




When you hire KC Coring and Cutting for your electrical or communication lines job, you can be assured that our crews will do everything they can to keep our clients, employees, and other teams safe.




KC Coring and Cutting receives excellent reviews.


We are happy to receive excellent reviews from our clients. Additionally, we have a great relationship with many of KC’s biggest construction and renovation firms, and many would be happy to talk about their experience working with our team. But don’t take our word for it. Check out our reviews and speak with others in the industry!
Request KC Coring and Cutting for Your Job




If your company is updating its communication or electrical lines, request that they use KC Coring and Cutting to help with the job. To receive a free bid, please contact KC Coring and Cutting at 816-523-2015.

Recent Posts

April 9, 2026
Construction across Missouri and Kansas is evolving rapidly. What once relied on handheld saws and basic equipment now requires engineering precision, strict safety compliance, and advanced technology. As cities continue to expand and infrastructure projects increase, structural modifications demand far more than simply cutting through concrete. Today’s environments require careful planning and controlled execution to ensure that every adjustment supports the integrity of the surrounding structure.  Project managers, engineers, and facility operators now expect processes that protect both the building and the people inside it while maintaining uninterrupted operations. Older cutting methods often produced heavy dust, excessive vibration, and inconsistent results, creating risks for workers and nearby occupants. Modern standards now focus on solving these challenges through technology-driven practices that prioritize environmental protection, structural accuracy, and operational safety. The Industry Challenge For Dust, Noise, and Structural Risk Concrete cutting traditionally produced significant airborne particles. These fine particles contain crystalline silica, a material known to pose serious respiratory risks when inhaled. Construction sites historically struggled to contain this dust, especially in enclosed environments. Noise and vibration have also been persistent issues. Conventional demolition tools transfer force throughout surrounding structures, increasing the possibility of cracking or weakening nearby surfaces. In occupied buildings, excessive sound levels can interrupt business operations or create safety concerns for occupants. Another major challenge involves hidden infrastructure inside concrete. Reinforcing steel, electrical conduits, plumbing systems, and post-tension cables often run through slabs and walls . Cutting blindly risks damaging these components, potentially causing structural hazards or costly project delays. These issues created the need for new operational standards capable of addressing environmental safety, precision, and structural protection simultaneously. Modern Dust Control Solutions One of the most visible improvements in current concrete cutting technology is the near elimination of airborne debris. Job sites now prioritize air quality through sophisticated equipment designed to capture particles immediately when they form. Integrated Dust Extraction Technology Modern cutting equipment incorporates vacuum shrouds built directly into the tool housing. Instead of attaching external accessories, the entire system is engineered to pull particles directly from the blade contact point. Industrial-grade HEPA filtration units connect to these saws, capturing extremely small particles before they enter the air. These filters are capable of trapping particles measuring only fractions of a micron, ensuring that hazardous materials remain contained. This approach has transformed indoor concrete work. Commercial spaces such as office basements, mechanical rooms, and underground corridors can now undergo structural modifications without contaminating surrounding environments. Wet-Cutting Advances Water-assisted cutting has been used in concrete work for many years, but modern technology has significantly improved how the process is controlled and managed. Today’s equipment focuses on precision water flow and proper slurry containment, allowing contractors to maintain cleaner job sites while protecting surrounding structures. These improvements help reduce airborne particles while ensuring that moisture does not spread beyond the work area. Improved water flow control: Modern cutting systems regulate water distribution to keep blades cool and reduce dust more effectively. Advanced slurry management: Contractors use slurry vacuums and containment barriers to capture excess water and debris. Protection for surrounding surfaces: Proper runoff control prevents water from spreading across floors or leaking into lower levels. Cleaner and safer work environments: Efficient slurry handling maintains dust suppression while protecting finished areas of a building.
By Dinesh K March 6, 2026
How Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) Improves Concrete Cutting Safety & Accuracy
January 12, 2026
The Role of Slab Sawing in Concrete Floor Drainage Corrections
December 23, 2025
What Brokk Demolition Is and Why It Is Safer Than Traditional Methods
December 23, 2025
How Precision Concrete Cutting Reduces Structural Damage on Job Sites
By SalesRep-Admin October 8, 2025
In the construction industry, safety is not just a legal requirement — it is a reflection of a company’s culture, training, and professionalism. One of the most accurate ways to measure a contractor’s safety performance is through something called EMR, or Experience Modification Rate. If you have ever reviewed a contractor’s prequalification paperwork, you haveRead More The post Understanding EMR: What It Is, Why It Matters, and Why a .78 Is Exceptional first appeared on Kansas City Coring & Cutting .
By SalesRep-Admin September 1, 2025
Safety on a concrete cutting jobsite does not start with signs, checklists, or rules — it starts with the equipment itself. Every saw, drill, and core rig is a potential hazard if not properly maintained. While many companies treat maintenance as a routine policy, at Kansas City Coring & Cutting, we see it as aRead More The post Why Equipment Maintenance Is a Safety Practice, Not Just a Policy first appeared on Kansas City Coring & Cutting .
By SalesRep-Admin August 12, 2025
Concrete cutting is one of the most critical and underestimated components of a construction project. A single mistake in this phase can cause costly delays, structural damage, or safety violations. Yet many contractors still select cutting partners based on price alone, rather than capability, experience, and professionalism. If your project involves concrete cutting, coring, orRead More The post The Contractor’s Guide to Hiring a Qualified Concrete Cutting Partner first appeared on Kansas City Coring & Cutting .
By SalesRep-Admin July 10, 2025
Concrete cutting and coring inside an occupied building require more than just precision. They demand planning, communication, and complete control over dust, noise, and vibration. Every move affects someone nearby — whether it is an office employee, hospital staff, or a tenant running a business. At Kansas City Coring & Cutting, we have spent decadesRead More The post Working Inside Occupied Buildings: Noise, Dust, and Coordination Strategies first appeared on Kansas City Coring & Cutting .
By SalesRep-Admin June 24, 2025
The construction industry has always carried risk. Every day, crews operate heavy equipment, work around live utilities, and manage environmental factors that can change by the minute. What is changing now is how we monitor and prevent those risks. Data, sensors, and artificial intelligence are beginning to redefine how safety is managed on the jobsite.Read More The post The Future of Construction Safety: How Data, Sensors, and AI Are Reducing Jobsite Risks first appeared on Kansas City Coring & Cutting .
Show More