
Cable & Conduit Boring
Underground bore-path creation for cable and conduit routes.
- Residential + light commercial
- Planned bore paths
- Entry + exit focused
- Quote-ready review
NextGen Cable Bore
A planned boring approach for driveway, sidewalk, landscape, pool-adjacent, and contractor-supported routes

One Partner From Scope To Surface
NextGen Cable Bore handles the route review, the bore plan, and the on-site execution as one continuous scope, so homeowners, contractors, and project teams work with a single accountable team from quote to clean-up.
01
Scope review
Surface, route, obstacles.
02
Bore plan
Path, entry, exit, locate.
03
Field execution
One crew, one standard.
Execution Capacity
100%
Path-First Planning
Every project starts with a reviewed route, not a drilled hole.
0
Surface Guesswork
Entry points, exit points, and surface crossings planned up front.
811
Locate Coordination
Existing utilities are reviewed and marked before any drilling begins.
1
Specialized Crew
A focused team for residential, contractor, and outdoor routes.
Core Services
Route review
WHY BORE
DIRECTIONAL BORING IS FOR ROUTES WHERE THE FINISHED SURFACE MATTERS. THE WORK STARTS WITH THE PATH, THE OBSTACLES, AND THE CLEANEST WAY TO CROSS THEM.
01
ROUTE
02
SURFACE
03
ACCESS
04
LOCATE
BORE ROUTE LOGIC

01
A PLANNED BORE ROUTE CAN MOVE BELOW DRIVEWAYS, SIDEWALKS, PATIOS, LAWNS, AND LANDSCAPE AREAS WITHOUT OPENING A LONG TRENCH ACROSS THE FINISHED SURFACE.
02
ROUTE NOTES, PHOTOS, ENTRY POINTS, EXIT POINTS, AND TIMING DETAILS GIVE HOMEOWNERS, CONTRACTORS, AND PROJECT TEAMS A CLEARER STARTING POINT.
03
DRIVEWAYS, SIDEWALKS, POOL DECKS, PATIOS, AND DECORATIVE CONCRETE CAN BE REVIEWED BEFORE TRENCHING IS ASSUMED.
04
EACH ROUTE IS REVIEWED AROUND THE EXACT SERVICE BOUNDARY, SURFACE CROSSING, ACCESS WINDOW, AND PROJECT CONDITION BEFORE FIELD WORK IS SCHEDULED.
Execution That Scales
Three connected steps that turn a request into a clean bore path, reviewed before drilling, executed with surface in mind, and delivered with a quote-ready plan.
Route-First Planning
Entry point, exit point, surface types, and existing utilities are reviewed before any drilling starts. The result is a boring plan designed around the obstacles that matter.

Surface-Aware Execution
Planned bore paths reduce the need for long open-trench cuts across lawns, hardscape, and decorative concrete. The work stays focused on the planned underground route.

Contractor-Ready Communication
Send address, surface types, route sketches, photos, or rough measurements. NextGen reviews the route, surface crossings, and project scope so the next step is clear.

Execution that scales
The process mirrors the way good utility work is reviewed: gather conditions, define the route, then confirm the scope before field execution.
01
Send photos, rough measurements, start and destination points, surfaces, timeline, and any contractor notes.

02
NextGen reviews access, surface types, route constraints, and known utility considerations before a quote is finalized.

03
The proposed entry, exit, and underground pathway are mapped around the project needs and confirmed service boundaries.

How NextGen operates
The route is created with a boring-first approach designed to reduce surface disruption compared with a long trench.
Execution posture
Route control
Route Ownership
Start, destination, and route notes are captured before review.
Accountability
Scope language stays tied to what NextGen confirms.
Checked
Route notes
Checked
Scope lock
Checked
Review packet

Field judgment
Surface Awareness
Driveway, sidewalk, landscape, and hardscape conditions are central.
Utility Caution
Underground conditions are treated as review items, not assumptions.
Checked
Locate flags
Checked
Surface review
Checked
Depth notes

Clean handoff
Single Point Of Intake
Photos, measurements, timing, and route use case go into one flow.
Field-Ready Detail
Contractors can share sketches or plan notes for a cleaner handoff.
Checked
Photos
Checked
Measurements
Checked
Field notes

FAQ
Clear route details beat vague promises. These answers keep the first conversation focused on surfaces, endpoints, access, and scope.
Quote readiness
Confirm
Surface type
Confirm
Entry + exit
Confirm
Access window
Ready to execute?
Upload support is planned later. For now, the form captures the route story: who is asking, where the project is, what the path needs to cross, and what details should be reviewed first.