Rooftop Unit Pads
Engineered pads and curbs for rooftop package units on warehouse and industrial roofs.
Commercial + Industrial Concrete Contractor
Parker County | Fort Worth | North Texas
trade coordination
Rooftop and interior HVAC pad, curb, and sleeve coordination built into the concrete pour schedule.

Our project teams align constructability, labor, and sequencing before execution so your service package is predictable and field-ready.
Pad Reinforcement
Elevation Tolerance
Blockout Coordination
Isolation Detailing
Concrete work almost never finishes before the mechanical trades show up — rooftop unit pads, condenser slabs, curb blockouts, and interior housekeeping pads all have to land in the right spot, at the right elevation, before the HVAC crew can set equipment. We coordinate HVAC-related concrete and mechanical trade scheduling as part of our commercial work in Weatherford and Parker County so general contractors and owners aren't chasing down a separate mechanical coordinator on top of the concrete sub.
On tilt-wall warehouses and distribution buildings, that means built-in pad locations for rooftop package units, engineered housekeeping pads for interior air handlers and boilers, and sleeve or blockout coordination so duct penetrations and refrigerant lines don't get discovered after the pour. On retail and restaurant build-outs it means condenser pads sized and pitched correctly the first time, because a redo on a live tenant schedule costs everyone days. We pull mechanical drawings before we set forms, not after, and flag conflicts with the mechanical contractor while there's still time to fix them on paper instead of in the field.
Parker County's expansive clay soils matter here more than people expect — a rooftop or ground-level HVAC pad that isn't engineered for the local soil movement will crack and settle, and a settled pad throws the whole unit out of level. We build pads to the same standard as our structural work: proper subgrade prep, correct reinforcement, and finish tolerances the mechanical crew can actually set equipment on without shimming. For owners managing multiple buildings, we also handle rooftop curb coordination on new construction so the roofing and mechanical trades aren't working against each other during equipment set.
If you're a GC on a design-build project in Weatherford or Parker County, we act as the concrete point of contact for HVAC-related sitework and structural coordination — reviewing mechanical schedules, sequencing pours around equipment delivery dates, and keeping the mechanical trade's concrete-dependent work off your critical path.
Engineered pads and curbs for rooftop package units on warehouse and industrial roofs.
Ground-level condenser and compressor pads for retail, restaurant, and office buildings.
Elevated, isolated pads for air handlers, boilers, and mechanical room equipment.
Duct and refrigerant line penetrations planned before the pour, not cut after.
3-5 days
We review equipment schedules and mechanical drawings against the structural pour plan before forming.
2-4 days
Pad locations, elevations, and sleeve blockouts are set to match equipment footprints.
3-7 days
Pads poured to engineered spec with proper subgrade prep for Parker County soils.
1 day
Pads inspected and released to the mechanical contractor for equipment set.
Technical Specs
Detailed requirements and execution notes for this service package.
Rebar-reinforced pads sized to equipment weight and vibration load, engineered for Parker County clay soil movement.
Parker County's expansive clay soils require engineered subgrade prep under any HVAC pad, or settlement will throw equipment out of level within a season.
Rooftop unit pads on metal building and tilt-wall roofs need coordination with the roofing subcontractor so curb flashing isn't compromised.
Fast-track retail and restaurant buildouts in Weatherford often have HVAC equipment ordered before final concrete drawings are approved — we build in tolerance for late spec changes where we can.
Multi-building industrial parks around Weatherford's I-20 corridor benefit from a single concrete crew handling all HVAC pad work across buildings for consistent scheduling.
Weatherford, TX
Twelve rooftop unit pads and four ground-level condenser slabs on a new distribution building.
Mechanical equipment specs were finalized after the structural pour schedule was already set.
Reviewed preliminary mechanical layout early, built conservative pad sizing into the roof structural plan, and confirmed final pad locations against as-ordered equipment cut sheets before forming.
All rooftop and ground-level pads ready for mechanical set on schedule with no rework, avoiding a delay to the building's occupancy date.
Coordinating HVAC pad work into your Weatherford project? Call to review your mechanical schedule against our pour plan.
Connect with our Weatherford project team for scope review, scheduling, and direct pricing.
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