Why KC Coring and Cutting Should Be Your First and Only Choice!

SalesRep-Admin • March 8, 2021

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If you live in the Kansas City metro area and are looking for a company to complete a concrete cutting project, your first (and only) call should be to KC Coring and Cutting. Ask anyone in the construction, renovation, or demolition industry in Kansas City, and you would get the same answer.




 

Our staff has decades of experience in core drilling and slab sawing. From completing large projects in downtown KC to cutting an egress window for homes in Shawnee, KC Coring and Cutting’s staff has seen and done it all.




 

Are you wondering why you should trust us with your project? Here are some reasons:




 

KC Coring and Cutting is known for producing quality work.


Check out our online reviews. We are proud of the feedback we have received from our customers. Our technicians are well-trained and have a ton of experience. They know that in our industry, they have one chance to do the job right.




 




KC Coring and Cutting completes projects on time. 


Another benefit of working with KC Coring and Cutting is that our bidders and schedulers have field experience. They know how long a project should take to complete, and this means we will finish our projects when promised.




 

Since we have worked in the construction, renovation, and demolition for so long, we know how important it is to complete our part of the project on time. We know that other professionals depend on us to maintain their schedules.

 

Our team works as a cohesive unit to meet deadlines. If you want to work with a company that offers this reassurance, contact KC Coring and Cutting.




 

The KC Coring and Cutting team is known for making intricate, precise cuts.


If you are faced with a concrete cutting job that requires precision, you don’t want to put your trust in just any random company that owns a few pieces of equipment. Instead, you should rely on a company that focuses its time, energy, and effort on being the best in the industry with this type of job.

 

If your project requires a precise cut in an exact spot, call KC Coring and Cutting. We have a wide range of well-maintained equipment that can complete any type of cutting and coring project. Our skilled crew members can use our precision equipment to follow the exact specs of a plan — so the plumbers and electricians who follow us will be able to finish their work with ease.




 

Safety is KC Coring and Cutting’s number one priority.


While we are proud of being known as a team that produces quality work on time, we are always mindful that we work in a dangerous industry. That’s why both the leadership and crew members of KC Coring and Cutting place safety as their priority.




 

We have a full-time Safety Director and Director of Risk Control Services. These important staff members train everyone on the team to ensure they provide a safe environment for our clients, other workers, and our employees.




 

Choose KC Coring and Cutting to complete your drilling, sawing, grinding, or blasting project. Call 816-523-2015 to talk with a member of our knowledgeable staff.

Recent Posts

April 30, 2026
When a building is still in use, every construction decision carries extra weight. Patients in hospital rooms, students in classrooms, and employees at their desks never signed up to deal with jackhammer noise, clouds of dust, or structural uncertainty overhead. That is exactly why concrete core drilling has become the go-to method for contractors and facility managers working in occupied or active buildings. It creates clean, circular openings through concrete slabs, walls, and ceilings with minimal vibration, controlled dust, and no impact damage to surrounding structure. For municipalities, school districts, hospital systems, and commercial property owners across Kansas City, it is not just the safest option. It is often the only responsible one. What Makes Core Drilling Different From Other Cutting Methods? Core drilling removes a cylindrical section of concrete using a diamond-tipped bit mounted on a specialized rig. The bit rotates at high speed and cuts through the material without transferring force into the surrounding slab or wall. There is no pounding, no chipping, and no cracking radiating outward from the cut zone. Compare that to jackhammers or impact tools, which work by breaking concrete through repeated force. That force does not stay in one place. It moves through the structure, rattles adjacent surfaces, and can weaken connections you cannot even see. In a building where people are working or receiving care, that kind of vibration is not acceptable. Other concrete sawing methods like flat sawing or wall sawing are excellent for specific applications, but they require more space, produce more surface disruption, and are harder to deploy inside tight or sensitive interior environments. Core drilling fits where other methods simply cannot. How Does Core Drilling Protect Building Occupants? This is where the method earns its reputation in occupied settings. The protection comes from three main factors working together. Dust control through wet drilling. Diamond core bits are used with a continuous water feed that cools the bit and captures concrete particles as slurry before they become airborne. This directly addresses one of the most serious health risks in concrete work: crystalline silica. When silica dust gets into the air, it is invisible and dangerous. Wet drilling keeps it contained at the source. Our team follows OSHA silica standards on every job, and the wet drilling process is central to that compliance. Low vibration output. Because the bit cuts by rotation rather than impact, the surrounding structure absorbs almost nothing. This matters enormously in hospitals where sensitive medical equipment is in use, or in schools where structural movement could affect adjacent classrooms. No collateral damage to finishes. A core drill produces a clean, round hole with smooth edges. There is no spalling, no cracking, and no need to patch the surrounding surface. That means less mess, fewer follow-up trades needed, and faster project completion without visible evidence of the work in adjacent spaces. What Happens Before the First Drill Even Starts? One of the most overlooked parts of safe core drilling in occupied buildings is what happens before any equipment is turned on. Drilling blind into a concrete slab is one of the most avoidable mistakes in construction, and yet it still causes costly project delays and structural incidents every year. At KC Coring, every occupied-building project begins with a Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) scan . GPR sends electromagnetic pulses into the concrete and maps what is inside: rebar, post-tension cables, conduit, plumbing lines, and electrical runs. The results show up as real-time images on a high-performance tablet right on the job site, giving our technicians a clear picture of exactly where it is safe to drill. This step is non-negotiable in hospitals and schools. Post-tension cables, in particular, are under enormous stress. Cutting one without knowing it is there can cause immediate structural failure. GPR eliminates that risk entirely by giving the team a verified map before anyone picks up a drill. Is Core Drilling Practical for Large-Scale Facility Work? Contractors sometimes assume core drilling is only for small, one-off penetrations. That assumption leaves a lot of capability on the table. Core drilling can produce holes ranging from a quarter inch all the way up to 66 inches in diameter. It works horizontally, vertically, at angles, above ground, below ground, and even underwater. For large mechanical or HVAC penetrations in a hospital retrofit, that range of capability is exactly what the job demands. In Kansas City, we regularly work on active facilities where multiple penetrations are needed across different floors and zones. Our scheduling team coordinates directly with facility managers to sequence the work around patient care hours, class schedules, or business operations. The goal is always to complete the work with zero disruption to the people inside the building. For municipalities managing infrastructure upgrades across occupied public buildings, this level of coordination is what separates a professional concrete cutting contractor from a general crew with a drill. Common Mistakes Contractors Should Avoid in Occupied-Building Core Drilling Even experienced teams make errors when the environment adds pressure. Here are the pitfalls worth knowing before the project starts. Skipping the GPR scan to save time. It seems like a shortcut until you hit a post-tension cable or live conduit. The scan takes a fraction of the time a repair or incident report would require. Do not skip it. Using the wrong bit diameter. Undersizing a core hole because it looks close enough creates problems for the trades that follow. Plumbers and electricians need the specified clearance to do their work correctly. Always confirm the exact diameter with the mechanical or electrical drawings before drilling. Ignoring slurry management. Wet drilling controls dust, but the slurry it produces still needs to be collected and removed properly. Letting slurry run across finished floors, into elevator pits, or down to lower levels creates a separate mess and potential liability. Proper containment barriers and slurry vacuums are part of a professional setup. Underestimating noise in sensitive zones. Core drilling is quieter than demolition, but it is not silent. In an occupied hospital or school, even moderate equipment noise can affect patient recovery or concentration. Coordinating drill times with facility staff is not optional. It is part of the job plan. Why Kansas City Contractors Trust KC Coring for Occupied Facilities
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.
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