Backhaul along I-25 frontage in Rio Rancho
Multi-duct pull under frontage road with NMDOT MOT — shallow utilities demand hand holes at every conflict before the bit tracks.
Albuquerque, NM · Bernalillo County
Fiber and telecom conduit boring along Albuquerque's I-25 and Paseo corridors — multi-duct HDD when trenching would cross dozens of driveways and shallow PNM stacks.
Fiber optic boring in Albuquerque supports carrier backhaul, enterprise rings, and 5G small-cell feeds without tearing up suburban streets and commercial frontage. Vault-to-vault and handhole-to-cabinet paths are drilled when Comcast, carriers, and contractor schedules cannot absorb HOA and city restoration fights.
Paseo del Norte, Coors Boulevard, and I-40 frontage stack shallow power, gas, and irrigation in the first few feet — remark tickets and pothole programs are standard on Albuquerque fiber bores. Multi-duct HDPE bundles pull when bend radius and reamed diameter are engineered, not overloaded.
Directional boring in Albuquerque for telecom often runs parallel to NMDOT relocations — same corridor, different owner inspection. We separate franchise fees, traffic control, and duct count in quotes so GCs can align splicing crew mobilization.
Real Bernalillo County angles — not generic statewide copy.
Multi-duct pull under frontage road with NMDOT MOT — shallow utilities demand hand holes at every conflict before the bit tracks.
Short curb-to-pole bore with power and fiber paths coordinated — compact rig footprint on tight urban ROW.
Duct bank between buildings under landscaped gravel — HOA restoration bonds favor trenchless over trench through common areas.
Night window bore under asphalt to avoid daytime tenant access loss — franchise and city ROW permits layered on 811.
Albuquerque fiber bores start with franchise and ROW clarity — then 811 tickets and potholes along the vault path. Ream diameter is sized for duct OD and count; pullback tension is watched on long shots along Paseo. As-builts feed splicing crews; traffic control follows NMDOT or city detail when the path leaves private property.
Bernalillo County mixes caliche hardpan, adobe clay, and Rio Grande valley sand — foothill volcanic tuff appears on east-side shots toward the Sandias.
Most Albuquerque bores hit caliche crust between 2 and 8 feet, then adobe clay or Rio Grande sand depending on distance from the river. East toward the Sandias, volcanic tuff and fractured basalt slow penetration without the right bit and mud program. Westside infill on old farmland can hide cobbles and debris lenses that stall reaming if geotech is skipped. Shallow groundwater along the bosque raises buoyancy risk on long HDPE pulls — we size ream stages and pullback tension accordingly, not with a generic Permian basin template.
High-desert sun, spring winds, and July–September monsoons shape Albuquerque bore schedules — lightning holds and post-storm arroyo runoff are planned into quotes.
Monsoon season from July through September is Albuquerque's biggest calendar variable. Saturated adobe clay softens ROW and can delay entry pits; arroyo channels carry debris after cloudbursts. Spring winds affect cage and fluid handling on exposed Westside pads. Winter cold snaps at 5,300 feet elevation slow morning startup but rarely stop work — we communicate when dry conditions matter for caliche-heavy pits rather than risk a frac-out toward the bosque.
City of Albuquerque Planning & Development, Bernalillo County ROW, NMDOT District 3, Rio Grande floodplain, and BNSF rail agreements apply on many alignments.
Inside Albuquerque city limits, street cuts, driveway removals, and bosque-adjacent work may need Planning & Development permits. Bernalillo County ROW rules apply on unincorporated pockets toward the airport and South Valley. NMDOT District 3 controls I-25, I-40, and Paseo del Norte state bores — expect traffic control plans and sometimes night-only windows. BNSF agreements govern rail-yard-adjacent crossings. Historic districts near Old Town and Downtown may add review on pit placement and surface restoration.
Fiber schedules die on restoration along Albuquerque commercial strips — boring keeps corridors moving. Open trench may fit greenfield Westside pads with no hardscape. Parallel gas runs require separation per code and sometimes operator clearance agreements.
Duct count, length, hardscape at vaults, traffic control, and city franchise fees.
You share plans or describe the problem; we confirm alignment, depth, access, and which trenchless method fits New Mexico soils.
New Mexico 811 ticket filed; two business days minimum before pits open unless your permit path differs. We pothole where marks conflict.
Bore plan, NMDOT or city ROW permits, railroad agreements, and crossing engineering when the path leaves private property.
Compact spread for tight Santa Fe lots; larger HDD for I-25 or I-40 relocations — matched to length and diameter.
Steered pilot on design line, ream passes sized for your pipe or casing, fluid program tuned for caliche or adobe clay.
HDPE fusion, steel casing, or multi-duct bundle pulled with tension and bend-radius monitoring.
Pressure test, mandrel, or survey records for owners, inspectors, and operators as spec requires.
Compact pits, replace gravel or hardscape per scope, leave 811 ticket and locate map in your project file.
Duct count, length, hardscape at vaults, traffic control, and franchise fees drive price — not a per-foot menu. Send vault locations and duct size for a scoped estimate.
Engineered from duct OD, wall thickness, and reamed hole — we do not overload pulls to save a ream pass.
Yes — locates, separation, and sometimes parallel clearance agreements. We do not drill on expired or incomplete marks.
When NMDOT and alignment permits approve the path — lead times often exceed drill duration.
24/7 — Emergency dispatch statewide. Tell us entry, exit, pipe size, and county — a bore specialist calls back with cost drivers, not a flat rate.
Scope your alignment
Step 1 of 2 — path, pipe, and city first