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Industrial and Commercial General Contractors in Pecos, TX - Inner Loop Construction

Industrial and Commercial General Contractors
Pecos, TX

Pecos, Texas, is the county seat of Reeves County and one of the fastest-growing oilfield communities in the Permian Basin on a per-capita basis. Situated at the junction of I-20 and US-285, Pecos serves as a critical logistics and infrastructure hub for the western edge of the Permian, with major saltwater disposal operations, pipeline gathering systems, and oilfield service yards concentrated throughout Reeves County. The West Texas State Fair has been held here for over a century, reflecting the deep agricultural and ranching roots of the county, but it is the oilfield economy — and particularly the explosive growth in produced water handling and SWD infrastructure — that drives the construction activity that Inner Loop Construction serves today.

Reeves County has become one of the most active oilfield water disposal markets in the Permian Basin. The volume of produced water generated by Permian wells has created an entire infrastructure industry of saltwater disposal facilities, water recycling plants, pipeline gathering networks, and storage yards that require large-scale industrial construction. SWD facilities need reinforced concrete pads rated for continuous loaded tanker traffic, secondary containment systems to meet environmental compliance requirements, and site paving that can handle the axle loads of 80,000-pound water tankers running 24 hours a day. These are demanding construction specifications, and they reflect the operational reality of one of the highest-producing oil counties in the state.

Commercial construction in Pecos has accelerated alongside the oilfield growth. The I-20 and US-285 commercial corridors have attracted hotels, truck stops, national chain restaurants, and convenience retailers servicing the enormous oilfield workforce that passes through and works in Reeves County. These commercial projects require pad-ready foundation work, parking lot paving designed for heavy truck traffic beyond normal commercial loads, and site concrete coordinated with tight opening schedules driven by franchise and lease commitments. The Reeves County Detention Center expansion and municipal infrastructure improvements represent the government and public sector construction work that active oilfield counties generate as their tax bases expand.

Pecos soil in the productive agricultural bottomland near the Pecos River is alluvial — relatively soft and occasionally moisture-sensitive — while the upland caliche and sandy loam is more typical Permian Basin subgrade. Each project location in Reeves County requires its own subgrade assessment, and our team approaches every industrial or commercial pour in this market with a site-specific evaluation. The desert climate of far West Texas, with low humidity, intense sun, and persistent wind, creates aggressive evaporation conditions that demand disciplined concrete placement procedures year-round.

Inner Loop Construction serves Pecos and Reeves County as part of our West Texas service territory, covering the I-20 corridor from Pecos to the Midland-Odessa metro and the US-285 corridor north toward Carlsbad. Whether you are building SWD infrastructure, constructing oilfield service yards, developing commercial property on the I-20 corridor, or installing industrial construction for pipeline and gathering support facilities, we deliver solutions built to perform under the continuous heavy use that oilfield-driven construction demands.

FAQs about Pecos, TX Industrial and Commercial Services

What construction work is most in demand in Pecos and Reeves County, Texas?

SWD facility pads, oilfield service yards, and industrial paving for tanker truck corridors are the dominant concrete project types in Reeves County. Commercial construction serving the oilfield workforce — hotels, fuel stations, and service businesses on the I-20 and US-285 corridors — generates additional commercial foundation and parking lot work.

What special requirements do SWD and produced water facilities have for concrete?

Saltwater disposal facilities require reinforced concrete slabs rated for continuous loaded tanker axle weights, secondary containment berms and lined ponds to meet environmental compliance standards, and site paving that can handle 24-hour truck traffic without premature joint failure or surface deterioration.

How do you manage concrete placement in Pecos's desert climate?

Far West Texas's combination of low humidity, high temperatures, and persistent wind creates some of the most aggressive concrete evaporation conditions in the state. We schedule large industrial pours for early morning or overnight hours, apply evaporation retarders immediately after placement, and begin curing protocol as soon as final texturing is complete to prevent plastic shrinkage cracking.

Can Inner Loop Construction serve remote oilfield site locations in Reeves County?

Yes. Remote oilfield site construction is a standard project type for our West Texas crews. We coordinate concrete delivery from local or regional batch plants, manage extended haul times with water reducer admixtures when necessary, and mobilize the equipment needed to finish large pads efficiently even at sites far from the Pecos city center.

Popular Services in Pecos, TX

Reeves County's status as a top Permian Basin producer makes oilfield service yards and SWD facility pads the primary industrial construction need. Heavy-duty slabs with secondary containment systems and truck court paving for water tankers and oilfield equipment are the dominant project types.

The I-20 and US-285 truck corridors through Pecos carry enormous oilfield equipment and water tanker traffic. Industrial paving for service yards, trucking operations, and pipeline support facilities must be engineered for continuous loaded-truck axle weights well above standard commercial design loads.

Oilfield supply warehouses, equipment storage facilities, and logistics buildings supporting Permian Basin operations require high-spec concrete floors and site paving. Reeves County's rapid oilfield growth has created sustained demand for warehouse infrastructure along the I-20 corridor.

#4Commercial Foundations

Hotels, fuel stations, restaurants, and service businesses expanding to serve the oilfield workforce in Pecos require properly engineered commercial foundations. Subgrade conditions vary across Reeves County and site-specific evaluation is essential before any commercial pour.

Fabrication shops, equipment repair facilities, and light manufacturing operations serving the Permian Basin oilfield require industrial construction floors with heavy-equipment anchor embedments, surface hardeners, and joint designs suited for metalworking and energy-sector maintenance operations.

Our Work in Pecos, TX

Example of the type of engagement we can handle

Situation

A produced water handling company needed to construct a reinforced concrete pad, secondary containment system, and tanker truck court at a new SWD facility in Reeves County.

Our Approach

We designed a 7-inch reinforced concrete truck court rated for 80,000-pound loaded tankers, installed a monolithic secondary containment berm around the facility equipment pad, and managed all placement in early-morning pours to control evaporation in the desert wind environment.

Expected Outcome

The SWD facility passed environmental inspection with full containment compliance and opened for continuous tanker operations, supporting the company's produced water handling capacity expansion in the western Permian Basin.

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