Shotcrete Services in the San Francisco Bay Area

From hillside retaining walls in Marin and Oakland to pool shells in San Jose and structural shotcrete walls across the Peninsula — SDW Construction has the crew, the pump, and 20+ years of Bay Area experience to get it done right.

Bay Area Shotcrete Contractor — Built for Hillsides, Pools & Structural Walls

Shotcrete is one of the most powerful tools in concrete construction — and in the San Francisco Bay Area, it’s practically a necessity. Our region’s steep hillside lots, expansive soils, seismic risks, and tight construction access make sprayed concrete the right method for dozens of projects that poured concrete simply can’t handle.

SDW Construction (operating as S.D. White Construction) has been providing shotcrete services across the Bay Area since 2001. We own our own B50 Reed shotcrete pump — a unit capable of delivering 50 yards per hour through several hundred feet of hose, reaching the tight corners and steep hillside sites that define Bay Area construction. Our crew are experienced shotcrete applicators, not general laborers assigned to the pump truck on pour day.

Need a shotcrete retaining wall, pool shell, slope stabilization, or structural wall in the Bay Area? Request a free onsite estimate → or call us at (510) 426-1854. Ask about our license, insurance, and workmanship warranty.

What Shotcrete Projects Do We Handle?

Shotcrete is versatile enough to build or stabilize structures that would be impractical with traditional formwork. Here’s what we work on most in the Bay Area.

 

What Is Shotcrete — and Why Is It So Useful in the Bay Area?

Shotcrete is concrete or mortar that’s pneumatically projected — sprayed at high velocity — through a hose and nozzle directly onto a surface. The high-velocity impact compacts the material as it’s applied, creating a dense, strong structure with excellent adhesion to rock, soil, steel, and existing concrete. Because the concrete goes where the hose goes, you can build or coat vertical walls, curved surfaces, steep slopes, and hard-to-reach areas without the full wood or steel formwork that poured concrete requires.

For Bay Area construction specifically, this matters enormously. Most of Marin County, the Oakland and Berkeley Hills, San Francisco’s western neighborhoods, and large parts of the Peninsula and East Bay hills involve steep terrain, retaining requirements, and tight site access that make traditional formwork either impractical or impossibly expensive. Shotcrete turns what would be a major logistical problem into a manageable scope of work.

Shotcrete Applications — What We Build in the Bay Area

Retaining Walls

Shotcrete retaining walls are one of the most practical solutions for Bay Area hillside properties. We place a reinforced steel cage or rebar mat, spray shotcrete to the engineered thickness — typically 6–12 inches for structural walls — and finish the surface as specified. Shotcrete walls can be built against cut slopes, tiered for steep lots, or constructed freestanding with drainage integrated from the start.

Most Common Bay Area Use

Hillside & Slope Stabilization

The Bay Area's hillside terrain — Oakland Hills, Marin, the Peninsula foothills, and parts of San Francisco — sees slope movement every rainy season. Shotcrete slope facing, combined with soil nails or rock anchors, stabilizes eroding or unstable slopes permanently. We spray a reinforced shotcrete blanket over the slope face to lock in surface material and prevent further erosion, often in coordination with a geotechnical engineer.

Critical for Hillside Properties

Swimming Pool Shells

Shotcrete and gunite are the standard construction methods for in-ground swimming pools — and for good reason. The spray application creates a pool shell that conforms to any shape, accommodates any depth, and reaches consistent thickness even on vertical walls and tight curves. Bay Area pools often require elevated seismic reinforcement. We install the steel, spray the shell, and hand it off ready for plaster, tile, and coping.

High Demand — Bay Area

Structural Vertical Walls

Architectural and structural concrete walls for new buildings, commercial projects, and residential additions can be built using shotcrete where traditional forming would be impractical. Shotcrete vertical walls achieve the same structural performance as cast-in-place concrete when properly reinforced and applied — and are faster to build on tight sites. Common in below-grade construction, below-street parking walls, and hillside building retaining systems.

Commercial & Residential

Soil Nail Walls

Soil nail walls pair drilled steel tendons into the hillside with a shotcrete facing panel to create a stable retained system that's especially effective on steep Bay Area hillsides. The tendons are drilled at angles into the slope, then tied into a rebar mat and covered with a 4–8-inch shotcrete face. This system is widely used for cut slopes in construction, landslide stabilization, and roadway support across the Bay Area.

Advanced — Engineer-Designed

Architectural & Decorative Shotcrete

Beyond structural work, shotcrete's shape-forming ability makes it ideal for sculpted features — natural rock formations, wine cave linings, waterfall structures, and custom architectural wall features. In the Bay Area wine country adjacent communities (Napa access from the East Bay, Sonoma from Marin) and high-end residential properties across the Peninsula and Marin, these decorative applications are increasingly popular.

Custom & High-End

Recent Bay Area Shotcrete Projects

Replace these placeholders with real project photos. Geo-tagged images of hillside retaining walls, pool shells, and structural walls perform well in both search and with visitors evaluating your work.

How Shotcrete Is Applied — The Technical Process

The quality of a shotcrete structure depends almost entirely on two things: the preparation before the spray, and the skill of the nozzleman during it. Great materials applied by an inexperienced crew produce poor results. Here’s what proper shotcrete application actually looks like.

1

Pre-Shoot

Surface Preparation & Excavation

The substrate — whether it's a cut slope, existing concrete, soil, or steel formwork — must be prepared before any shotcrete is placed. For slope facing, loose material is cleared and the slope is graded to a stable angle. For retaining walls, the cut face is trimmed and drainage systems are planned. For pool shells, excavation is completed to the engineer's dimensions. A poorly prepared surface is the leading cause of shotcrete delamination and failure.

2

Pre-Shoot

Rebar & Reinforcement Placement

For structural retaining walls and pool shells, a steel reinforcement mat or cage is placed before any concrete is sprayed. For retaining walls, this is typically #4 or #5 rebar on 12-inch centers both ways. Reinforcement must be tied and positioned so the shotcrete can fully encapsulate it — a minimum of 2–3 inches of cover behind and in front of the steel. In Bay Area Seismic Design Category D, rebar sizing and placement in shotcrete retaining walls often exceeds what a non-seismic project would require.

3

Pre-Shoot

Drainage & Waterproofing Design

Every shotcrete retaining wall in the Bay Area needs a drainage system behind it. Hydrostatic pressure from our wet season rainfall is the number-one cause of retaining wall failure — concrete, shotcrete, or otherwise. We install perforated drain pipe wrapped in filter fabric at the base of the wall backfill, with weep holes or outlet pipes through the wall face at regular intervals. Ignoring drainage is a shortcut that produces walls that lean, crack, and eventually fail.

4

Application

Shotcrete Pump Setup & Mix Design

We use our B50 Reed concrete pump, which delivers up to 50 cubic yards per hour through several hundred feet of hose. This reach capability is critical for Bay Area hillside sites where the pump truck can't get close to the wall face. For structural applications, we specify 4,000–5,000 PSI concrete mix. Coastal Bay Area sites may warrant admixtures for sulfate and chloride resistance. Mix design is confirmed before the shoot begins.

5

Application

Shotcrete Application — Layers & Encapsulation

The nozzleman applies shotcrete in layers, building up to the specified thickness (typically 6–12 inches for structural retaining walls, 6–9 inches for pool shells, and 4–6 inches for slope facing). The nozzle is held perpendicular to the surface at the correct standoff distance — around 3–5 feet — to maximize compaction and minimize rebound. The steel reinforcement must be fully encapsulated with no voids or shadowing behind the bars. A skilled nozzleman can see and hear the difference between good encapsulation and a shadow void — an inexperienced one cannot.

6

Finishing

Surface Finishing & Curing

Once the shotcrete is applied to full thickness, the surface is finished as specified — rod-cut to a flat plane for retaining walls, hand-formed for pool shells and curved features, or left natural-texture for slope facing. Curing begins immediately after finishing — we apply a chemical curing compound or keep the surface moist for a minimum of 7 days. Bay Area summer conditions (heat and fog cycles) require careful curing management to prevent surface cracking.

7

Post-Shoot

Inspection, Testing & Backfill

Structural shotcrete walls typically require a special inspection during application and core samples or test panels for compressive strength verification. We retain batch tickets and, where required, provide test panels to the inspector or engineer. Backfill behind retaining walls is not placed until the shotcrete has reached sufficient strength — typically 7 days minimum — and the drainage system is inspected. Premature backfill loading is a common cause of wall failures we won't contribute to.

Shotcrete vs. Other Retaining Wall Methods — Quick Comparison

MethodBest ForSeismic PerformanceFormwork Needed
Shotcrete WallHillsides, complex shapes, tight accessExcellent with rebarMinimal or none
Poured Concrete WallStraight walls, easy access sitesExcellentFull forms required
CMU Block WallModerate height, accessible sitesGood (grouted & rebar)No
Soil Nail + ShotcreteSteep cuts, existing slope retentionVery goodNone
Segmental Block (Keystone)Lower walls, landscaping, DIY-friendlyModerateNo

Why Bay Area Shotcrete Projects Are Different

The conditions that make the Bay Area such a challenging construction environment are exactly the conditions shotcrete was designed for. Here’s what every Bay Area property owner should understand before building a retaining wall, pool, or slope stabilization system.

🌍 Seismic Design — SDC D Requirements

Most of the Bay Area falls in California Seismic Design Category D — among the highest residential seismic risk classifications in the country. Shotcrete retaining walls in SDC D must meet specific reinforcement requirements. Rebar sizing, spacing, and development length in shotcrete walls are governed by engineer's drawings, not contractor preference. We build to the stamped structural plans, every time.

🏔️ Hillside Terrain & Slope Cuts

The Oakland Hills, Berkeley Hills, Marin hillsides, San Francisco's western neighborhoods, and Peninsula foothills all involve steep lots where cut slopes and retaining requirements are routine. Shotcrete is often the only practical method when a pump truck can't get adjacent to the work face and you need to cover a large area of cut slope quickly. Our 300+ feet of pump hose reaches where other contractors can't.

🌧️ Bay Area Rainfall & Drainage

Between November and March, the Bay Area receives 80–90% of its annual rainfall. Any retaining wall or slope stabilization system built without proper drainage design will eventually fail under hydrostatic pressure. We design drainage into every shotcrete retaining wall from day one — perforated drain pipe at the base, filter fabric backfill, and weep holes through the wall face. This isn't optional in a Bay Area climate.

🌱 Expansive Soils & Settlement Risk

East Bay communities — Oakland, Fremont, Hayward, Walnut Creek, and surrounding areas — sit on Montmorillonite clay soils that expand when wet and shrink when dry. This seasonal movement places ongoing lateral pressure on retaining walls. Shotcrete walls in these areas require adequate thickness, proper reinforcement to resist the additional lateral load, and a drainage system that prevents the clay from becoming saturated behind the wall.

🌊 Coastal Exposure & Mix Design

Properties near the Bay shoreline, the Pacific coast, or Marin's waterfront face persistent salt air and coastal moisture. For these sites, we specify 4,500–5,000 PSI shotcrete with a blended cement that resists chloride penetration. Standard 4,000 PSI mixes are adequate for inland sites but undersized for coastal Bay Area exposure — a detail that saves you from expensive surface deterioration in 10–15 years.

🏗️ Tight Site Access — Our Pump Advantage

Many Bay Area residential lots — particularly in San Francisco, the Oakland Hills, and Marin — have no practical way to get a ready-mix truck or formwork materials to the actual wall location. Shotcrete solves this directly: the pump stays at street level or wherever it can park, and our hose delivers material to wherever the work is happening. We've successfully completed retaining walls and slope work that other contractors turned down because of access.

Permits & Engineering for Bay Area Shotcrete Work

Shotcrete retaining walls, slope stabilization systems, and structural walls in the Bay Area require building permits — and for good reason. These are load-bearing structures in a seismic zone with significant hillside terrain.

  • Retaining walls over 4 feet in height almost universally require a building permit and a structural engineer’s stamped drawings throughout the Bay Area
  • Soil nail walls require a geotechnical engineer’s design and a structural engineer’s drawings — always
  • Swimming pools require a building permit in all Bay Area cities, along with electrical and plumbing permits for equipment and lighting
  • Slope stabilization on hillside lots may require both a building permit and a grading permit, plus a geotechnical report in many Bay Area jurisdictions
  • Special inspection is required for structural shotcrete in California Seismic Design Category D — an independent special inspector observes reinforcement and application
What we handle vs. what you need: SDW Construction coordinates with building departments, schedules inspections, and manages our own documentation (batch tickets, test panels, inspection sign-offs). You or your GC typically provide the engineer’s stamped drawings and the geotechnical report before we start. We’ll clearly tell you what’s needed at your onsite estimate. Always verify current permit requirements with your local building department — requirements change, and Bay Area cities each have their own rules.

Why Bay Area Property Owners Choose SDW Construction for Shotcrete

Anyone can rent a shotcrete pump. The quality of the work comes down entirely to the crew operating it and the preparation that happened before the first yard was sprayed. We’ve been doing this work across the Bay Area since 2001 — operating as SDW Construction and S.D. White Construction — and we’ve built our reputation on exactly the projects other contractors walk away from: tight hillside access, difficult soil conditions, complex pool geometries, and structural retaining walls that have to perform in a seismic zone.

  • We own our equipment: Our B50 Reed pump and several hundred feet of hose mean we can reach sites that require pump staging away from the work face — the most common constraint on Bay Area hillside projects.
  • Seismic experience: We understand California SDC D reinforcement requirements and the specific demands Bay Area hillside terrain places on retaining walls and slope systems.
  • Drainage comes first: We design the drainage system before we design the wall. Every shotcrete retaining wall we build has weep holes, drain pipe, and filter fabric as standard — not as an upsell.
  • Written workmanship warranty: Every project. Terms available before you sign.
  • Our crew — always: No subcontracting the actual shotcrete work. The people who give your estimate are the people who show up and spray your wall.

Get A Free Quote

Ready to upgrade your driveway? Tell us about your project and we’ll schedule a free onsite visit — no pressure, no obligation. Serving the Bay Area since 2001.

Hillsides, pools, and walls that were impossible any other way.

20+ years of Bay Area shotcrete experience. Our own pump and crew. Licensed, insured, and built for the sites other contractors won’t touch.

How We Work For Our Customers

Four clear steps from the first conversation to the finished structure — whether it’s a hillside retaining wall, a pool shell, or a structural shotcrete wall.

Assess

Free onsite visit. We assess your slope, wall, or pool site, review any existing engineering drawings, and identify access challenges, drainage needs, and permit requirements upfront.

Quote

We give you a detailed written estimate — not a ballpark. It covers shotcrete scope, rebar, drainage, access logistics, and any permit coordination included in our scope.

Build

Our own crew and our own pump. Rebar, surface prep, drainage, and shotcrete application — all handled by the same team. No subcontractors on the shoot itself.

Deliver

Final walkthrough, inspection sign-offs, batch documentation, and your written workmanship warranty. We don't consider the job done until you're satisfied and the inspector is happy.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Got a question? Get your answers

Quick answers to questions you may have. Can’t find what you’re looking for? Check out our full documentation.

Shotcrete is used to build retaining walls, swimming pool shells, hillside slope stabilization systems, structural vertical walls, soil nail wall facings, and architectural concrete features — anywhere sprayed concrete’s flexibility and reduced formwork requirements offer an advantage over poured concrete.
In the Bay Area specifically, shotcrete is used heavily for hillside retaining walls (where access prevents traditional formwork), pool shells (the standard method for custom in-ground pools), slope stabilization on eroding hillside properties, and structural walls in new construction on tight urban lots. The method’s ability to reach difficult locations through a pump hose — without needing a truck at the work face — makes it indispensable for Bay Area residential and commercial projects.

Shotcrete refers broadly to any pneumatically applied concrete. Gunite specifically means dry-mix shotcrete, where water is added at the nozzle. Wet-mix shotcrete arrives fully mixed and is pumped to the nozzle where air is added for projection. Both produce strong, durable structures when properly applied.
The key practical differences: wet-mix shotcrete is faster for large structural volumes (retaining walls, foundations, slope facing) and produces more consistent water-cement ratios. Dry-mix gunite is preferred by many pool contractors because the nozzleman controls water addition in real time, which is useful for shaping pool shells and complex curves. For most Bay Area retaining walls and structural work, wet-mix shotcrete is the better choice. For pools and water features, either method works well in skilled hands — dry-mix gunite is most common in the pool industry.

Yes — when properly applied, shotcrete achieves the same compressive strength as conventional cast-in-place concrete. The American Concrete Institute (ACI) recognizes shotcrete as an equivalent structural material to poured concrete. Properly applied shotcrete can reach 4,000–5,000+ PSI, identical to structural poured concrete. In fact, the high-velocity impact compaction during application can produce concrete that is slightly denser than equivalent poured concrete in some cases. The key phrase is “properly applied” — shotcrete quality is highly dependent on operator skill and surface preparation. Poorly applied shotcrete with excessive rebound material incorporated, shadowing behind rebar, or insufficient curing will underperform. This is why hiring an experienced shotcrete crew matters far more than the method itself.

A properly reinforced and applied shotcrete structure in the Bay Area can last 50–100 years with basic maintenance. Retaining walls and pool shells that are well-drained, sealed periodically, and inspected for cracks routinely achieve multi-decade service lives with minimal intervention.
Longevity depends on four things: mix design (PSI, admixtures for the exposure condition), rebar encapsulation (no voids or shadowing), drainage design (water pressure destroys retaining walls from behind), and surface sealing for structures exposed to Bay Area moisture and salt air. The Bay Area’s mild climate (no hard freeze-thaw cycles) is actually favorable for concrete longevity — the main threats locally are hydrostatic pressure behind walls, coastal chloride exposure, and expansive clay soil movement in the East Bay.

Yes — shotcrete (and gunite, its dry-mix variant) is the standard construction method for in-ground swimming pools worldwide. The spray application allows the pool shell to be formed to any shape, size, and depth without extensive formwork. Most custom residential pools in the Bay Area are built using shotcrete or gunite.
For a standard residential pool, the shotcrete shell is typically 6–9 inches thick, reinforced with #3 or #4 rebar on 12-inch centers both ways. The shell is then plastered, tiled, and finished after the shotcrete fully cures. In Bay Area seismic zones, pool shells benefit from heavier reinforcement than in non-seismic markets. The shotcrete scope (shell only) is typically $10,000–$30,000 — the total pool installation including plaster, tile, coping, equipment, and decking runs significantly higher.

The main difference is construction method, not structural performance. Poured concrete walls require forms on both faces of the wall before pouring. Shotcrete walls are sprayed onto one face of a rebar mat without full enclosing forms, making them faster and more practical on hillside sites and tight access locations.
For Bay Area hillside lots where a ready-mix truck can’t park adjacent to the wall face, shotcrete is often the only practical choice. A shotcrete wall achieves the same structural performance as an equivalent poured concrete wall when properly reinforced and applied. Poured concrete may be preferred on accessible flat sites where the formwork isn’t a logistical challenge, since it’s slightly easier to achieve a smooth face finish with forms. For most Bay Area retaining wall applications, shotcrete is the better tool.

Hillside stabilization in the Bay Area typically uses one or more of these methods: shotcrete slope facing (spraying a concrete layer over the slope), soil nailing with shotcrete facing (drilling anchors then shotcreting), retaining walls at the toe of the slope, or engineered drainage systems to remove water that destabilizes the slope. The right method depends on the slope angle, soil type, and how much movement has already occurred.
Most Bay Area hillside stability problems have a water component — seasonal rainfall saturating clay soils or building up hydrostatic pressure. Before committing to a specific method, a geotechnical engineer should assess the slope, identify the failure mechanism, and recommend the appropriate stabilization system. SDW Construction works from engineer’s designs for all hillside stabilization projects — if you don’t have a geotechnical report yet, we can recommend licensed geotech firms in the Bay Area. A stabilization system built without a geotechnical assessment is a guessing game in a seismic zone.