Heavy marine construction, built to the load.
Marinas, bulkheads, ship-channel adjacent work, restaurant waterfronts, museum-area projects, pavilions, and pile-supported structures. Shore Tech's commercial roots run through petrochemical and industrial marine — the same discipline shapes every commercial project.
Where strength, durability, and field judgment matter.
Shore Tech handles commercial marine projects where the wrong material, the wrong substructure, or the wrong sequence is expensive to undo. Field judgment shapes the build; structural calculations belong to engineering partners when warranted.
Commercial bulkheads
Heavy-load shoreline walls for industrial and ship-channel frontage.
Marinas
Slip systems, fixed & floating piers, fueling docks.
Waterfront pavilions
Pile-supported entertainment, dining, and event structures.
Floating & pile-supported
Platforms designed for current, tide, wake, and storm loads.
Restaurant waterfronts
Reconstruction, expansion, and seasonal-load hardening.
Municipal & public
Boardwalks, parks, public access, ship-channel adjacent improvements.
Ship channel & museum
Specialty marine adjacent to industrial and cultural sites.
Specialty platforms
Light heliport concepts, observation pads, sensor mounts.
Crane, barge, and fabrication capacity on the water.
Commercial waterfront work often comes down to setting heavy, awkward components into position over open water. Shore Tech runs crane and barge equipment to place fabricated modules, pile-supported platforms, and structural steel where land-based equipment can't reach.
Construction belongs to us. Calculations belong to engineers.
For larger commercial and municipal work, Shore Tech coordinates with outside engineering firms. Stamped drawings, structural calculations, and permit-grade documentation — paired with field execution that respects what the drawings actually require.
Materials & engineering →Have a commercial project to scope?
Commercial marine work begins with site, soil, and use — call to talk through the project before sketches are drawn.