What Contractors Need to Know Before Scheduling a Concrete Cutting Job
Scheduling a concrete cutting job without the right preparation can cause delays, damage, and unexpected costs. Before any saw touches a slab or wall, there are several things contractors need to confirm, from site conditions to the right cutting method. At KC Coring, we have worked on thousands of job sites across Kansas City and the surrounding region, and the projects that go smoothest are always the ones where the contractor came prepared.
What Information Does a Concrete Cutting Contractor Actually Need?
When you call to schedule a concrete cutting job, the more information you bring to the table, the better. Concrete cutting is not a one-size-fits-all service. The method, equipment, and crew size all depend on specifics that vary from one job to the next.
Here is what we typically need before putting together an accurate bid:
The type of surface being cut, whether it is a floor, wall, ceiling, or curb. The thickness of the concrete and whether it is reinforced with rebar or post-tension cables. The location of the cut, including whether it is indoors or outdoors, and whether the building is occupied. The diameter or dimensions of the opening or trench required. Access limitations, ceiling heights, and whether equipment needs to fit through a doorway or navigate stairs.
Contractors who walk the site before calling tend to get faster, more accurate bids. It saves back and forth and keeps the project on schedule.
Does the Cutting Method Change Based on the Job?
Yes, and this is one of the most important things to understand before scheduling. Not every concrete cutting job calls for the same approach. Using the wrong method can result in overcuts, structural stress, or a finish that requires costly rework.
Here is a quick breakdown of how the method changes based on what the job demands:
For horizontal surfaces like floors, slabs, roadways, or bridge decks, flat/slab sawing is the standard method. These saws cut to controlled depths and produce clean, straight lines across large surface areas.
For vertical surfaces like walls, columns, or steeply angled concrete, wall sawing is the right call. Track-mounted saws travel along a secured guide, delivering consistent depth and a clean edge on openings for doors, windows, or mechanical systems.
For square-cornered openings where overcuts are not acceptable, chain sawing is the answer. The diamond-segmented chain cuts flush to the corners without the radius that circular blades leave behind.
For round openings in slabs, walls, or ceilings for plumbing, HVAC, or electrical systems, core drilling is what gets used. It produces clean, circular holes of almost any diameter without vibration or structural disruption.
Choosing the right method upfront is not just about quality. It directly affects how fast the job gets done and whether the crews following you can move in without complications.
Why a GPR Scan Should Happen Before Any Cut
One of the most common mistakes contractors make is skipping the scan. Concrete slabs and walls often contain hidden infrastructure that does not show up on original blueprints or shows up in the wrong location due to field changes during construction.
Reinforcing steel, post-tension cables, electrical conduits, and plumbing lines can all run through the area you plan to cut. Striking any of these mid-job creates serious problems, from structural compromise to live electrical hazards, and can shut a project down entirely.
Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) scanning is the non-destructive way to see what is inside the concrete before the first cut is made. Our scanners produce real-time 2D and 3D imaging on site, identifying the exact depth and location of embedded objects. We can differentiate between rebar, post-tension cables, conduits, plastic pipes, and even voids or hollow spaces within the slab.
For contractors working in Kansas City on occupied facilities, hospitals, schools, or municipal buildings, a GPR scan is not optional. It is the step that protects your schedule, your crew, and the structure itself.
What Site Conditions Can Affect the Job?
Even when the cutting method is confirmed and the scan is done, site conditions can still slow things down if they are not addressed ahead of time. Here are a few things contractors often overlook:
Water access and drainage. Most concrete cutting is done wet to control dust and cool the blade. If there is no water source nearby, that needs to be arranged in advance. Slurry also needs to go somewhere, and on finished floors or in occupied buildings, containment matters.
Power availability. Electric saws are the preferred choice for interior work since they produce no fumes and run quieter. If the site does not have accessible power, the equipment selection may need to shift to hydraulic or diesel units depending on the environment.
Ceiling height and access clearance. Wall saws and larger rigs need room to set up. Low ceilings, tight doorways, or congested work areas can limit which equipment gets deployed. In cases where space is extremely restricted, hand sawing or chain sawing becomes the practical option.
Occupied spaces. When cutting happens in a building with active occupants, noise, dust, and work hours all need to be coordinated. We have extensive experience working in live environments across the Kansas City metro, and proper planning makes all the difference in keeping those projects running smoothly.
How Does Concrete Thickness and Reinforcement Affect the Schedule?
Thicker slabs and heavily reinforced concrete take longer to cut and require more blade changes. This is worth knowing before you build your project timeline.
Standard residential slabs typically run four to six inches thick. Commercial and industrial slabs can run anywhere from eight inches to well over twenty-four inches. Post-tension slabs require extra attention because cutting a tensioned cable releases stored energy and can cause dangerous structural movement.
When we assess a job, knowing the slab thickness and reinforcement type helps us bring the right blades, the right rig, and the right crew size. For particularly large or complex structural cuts, wire sawing may be the right fit since it has no depth limitation and works well on bridges, foundations, columns, and other heavily reinforced structures.
Contractors who communicate these details upfront consistently see more accurate timelines and fewer mid-job surprises.
When Is Brokk Demolition the Right Call Instead?
Sometimes a project calls for more than cutting. When selective demolition is needed in a confined space, a hazardous environment, or an area where a standard excavator simply cannot fit, Brokk robotic demolition becomes the right tool for the job.
Brokk machines are electric-powered, remote-controlled, and compact enough to fit through standard doorways and even navigate stairs. Despite their size, they deliver serious breaking and crushing force. Because the operator controls the machine from a safe distance, these units are particularly well suited for hospitals, parking garages, industrial plants, and tunnels where worker exposure needs to be minimized.
If your project involves breaking out large sections of reinforced concrete in a tight or sensitive environment, it is worth discussing whether Brokk demolition fits the scope before scheduling standard cutting crews.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far in advance should a contractor schedule a concrete cutting job?
For standard jobs, scheduling one to two weeks out is generally enough. For larger or more complex projects involving multiple methods, GPR scanning, or work in occupied buildings, reaching out three to four weeks ahead gives everyone time to plan properly and confirm equipment availability.
Does concrete cutting work stop operations in an occupied building?
Not necessarily. We regularly perform concrete cutting and core drilling in occupied facilities across Kansas City, including hospitals, schools, and commercial offices. Electric equipment, dust control systems, and off-hours scheduling all help minimize disruption to the building and its occupants.
What happens if post-tension cables are found in the slab?
Post-tension cables require special handling. Cutting them without proper planning can cause sudden structural movement and serious safety hazards. A GPR scan identifies their location and depth before any cutting begins, allowing the crew to plan cuts that avoid the cables entirely or coordinate with a structural engineer when routing around them is not possible.
Is wet cutting always required?
Wet cutting is the standard approach for most concrete cutting work because it controls silica dust and keeps blades cool. In some situations, dry cutting with vacuum-assisted dust extraction is used instead, particularly in areas where water runoff would damage finished surfaces or create containment issues.
Can one contractor handle scanning, cutting, and demolition on the same project?
Yes, and working with a single contractor for multiple scopes simplifies coordination significantly. At KC Coring, we handle GPR scanning, all major cutting methods, and Brokk demolition under one roof, which means fewer handoffs, tighter scheduling, and consistent communication from start to finish.
What to Do Before You Call
Getting a concrete cutting job on the schedule starts with having the right information ready. Know your surface type, slab thickness, reinforcement details, access conditions, and whether the building will be occupied during the work. If you are unsure about any of these details, a pre-job site walk with our team in Kansas City can help fill in the gaps before the bid goes out.
KC Coring & Cutting has been serving contractors, business owners, and municipalities across the Kansas City region for more than 47 years. From core drilling and slab sawing to Brokk demolition and GPR scanning, we bring the right method, the right equipment, and a safety record that speaks for itself to every job we take on. Contact us on our website to discuss your next project and get a quote.
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