
Gresham has grown from a farming community into Oregon’s fourth-largest city, with over 112,000 residents and a sprawling underground utility grid installed mostly during the rapid suburban expansion of the 1970s through 1990s. Utility mapping from that era is often imprecise. Prodan Construction provides professional utility potholing and vacuum excavation throughout Gresham, giving contractors verified underground intelligence before any excavation begins.
Utility potholing physically exposes buried utility positions using vacuum extraction rather than mechanical force. Surface locate markings can be inaccurate by several feet in Gresham’s clay-heavy alluvial soils. Potholing creates a direct visual window to the utility itself, providing ground truth that electronic instruments alone cannot guarantee.
Soft digging uses pressurized water or compressed air to disaggregate the soil, followed by vacuum extraction. The Boring Lava basalt underlying eastern Gresham near Gresham Butte responds well to hydro excavation, which fractures the weathered volcanic matrix without jarring impact. Near fiber optic lines along Burnside Road or gas mains beneath Division Street, we switch to air excavation for even less force.
Many Centennial and North Central streets were built during the 1980s boom, with multiple utility providers installing lines in close succession. As-built records from that era frequently conflict with field conditions. Potholing resolves these discrepancies through direct visual confirmation.
Both methods use vacuum excavation to reveal buried utilities, but they serve different purposes. The right choice depends on whether you need a quick positional check or a full-length exposure for repair or inspection.
A compact twelve-to-eighteen-inch test hole confirms exact depth and position at a single point. In Gresham, this is standard before directional boring, foundation excavation, and new service installations. A single pothole at a Pleasant Valley lot or Stark Street site takes less than an hour.
Daylighting exposes a continuous utility section for inspection or connection work. Aging water mains in Rockwood frequently need condition assessment before the city authorizes replacement. Our vacuum process reveals full pipe surfaces without disturbing adjacent lines running inches away.
A damaged gas main can halt a Gresham subdivision project for days. Non-destructive vacuum excavation eliminates the root cause — mechanical contact with buried infrastructure.
In the Centennial neighborhood, gas and water services may share a narrow trench separated by inches of backfill. Vacuum excavation applies zero mechanical force to the utility surface — soil is removed around the pipe, not scraped off it. This eliminates gouges, cracks, and punctures that backhoe buckets cause.
For developers building in Pleasant Valley or along Hogan Road, potholing costs a fraction of overall earthwork budgets. An accidental strike — emergency repair, downtime, penalties — can exceed the entire excavation line item. Our clients view potholing as project insurance.
Rockwood’s dense utility corridors — water, sewer, gas, electric, and telecom sharing narrow rights-of-way — demand methods that fit confined spaces. Our vacuum hoses reach between foundations, beneath sidewalks, and inside active trenches where conventional equipment risks collateral damage.
Our truck-mounted units handle Gresham’s full soil range. Western areas sit on soft Missoula Flood deposits; eastern areas near Gresham Butte transition to weathered Boring Lava basalt requiring higher pressure and rotary nozzles. One crew handles both extremes in a single mobilization.
Each unit carries a high-volume debris tank, onboard water supply, and variable-pressure pump. When conditions shift mid-hole from silt to basalt cobbles — common in transitional zones — operators adjust immediately. Extension wands reach depths exceeding ten feet for Gresham’s hillside lots.
Our Gresham potholing follows a disciplined four-step sequence for accurate results and safe operations on every project.
We review OUNC markings, city GIS records, and project as-builts, with special attention to areas where multiple development phases created overlapping corridors — like the Rockwood commercial district. Electromagnetic scanning supplements the records to identify critical crossings.
In western Gresham’s silty deposits, moderate pressure moves material quickly. In basalt soils east of Gresham Butte, increased pressure and rotary nozzles fragment volcanic material. The vacuum runs continuously, keeping excavations clear.
We measure and record each utility’s depth, horizontal offset, material, diameter, and condition. GPS-referenced pothole logs with annotated photographs integrate into CAD drawings, satisfying City of Gresham permitting and engineering standards.
Each pothole is backfilled in compacted lifts. Paved areas receive temporary cold-mix asphalt. We leave every Gresham site clean, restored, and in pre-excavation condition.
Prodan Construction LLC (CCB #176278) is twelve minutes from downtown Gresham. Beyond potholing, we provide demolition, land clearing, and retaining wall construction — a single point of contact for multiple site preparation needs.
Our crews have worked across every Gresham neighborhood — Central City, Historic Southeast, Pleasant Valley, Hogan Cedars. We understand the permitting landscape, soil conditions, and infrastructure challenges. When you need verified utility positions in Gresham, call Prodan Construction.
We safely expose gas mains, water lines, sanitary and storm sewers, electrical conduit, telecom cable (copper and fiber), and private irrigation systems. The method works regardless of material — PVC, ductile iron, copper, HDPE, concrete, or clay.
The Boring Lava basalt near Gresham Butte and Powell Valley creates harder conditions. Our hydro excavation handles it with higher water pressure and rotary nozzles that fragment weathered rock layer by layer. Basalt zones take moderately longer per pothole, which we include in estimates.
Yes. Oregon law requires contacting the Oregon Utility Notification Center at least two business days before any excavation. This triggers utility-owner facility marking. We use those markings as starting reference, then verify actual positions through vacuum potholing.
We maintain capacity for urgent requests. If a crew encounters an unexpected utility or needs immediate verification, we typically mobilize within twenty-four hours. Our twelve-minute proximity from Damascus means faster response than competitors further away. Call (503) 773-6949 for emergency scheduling.
Gresham’s growth means more underground utilities and more potential conflicts. Whether building in Pleasant Valley, renovating in Rockwood, or upgrading infrastructure along Burnside Road, Prodan Construction delivers precise, non-destructive utility verification. Reach out today.
Call us at (503) 773-6949 or send us a message to request your free utility potholing estimate in Gresham.