Service · Hendersonville, TN & Middle Tennessee

Erosion Control

Soil washing away after every rain? We stop erosion at its source — riprap rock, geotextile fabric, swale grading, slope stabilization, and seeding. Permanent solutions for Hendersonville and all of Middle Tennessee.

Free On-Site Estimates Owner-Operated Hendersonville, TN Based 21+ Five-Star Reviews

Erosion Control in Hendersonville & Middle Tennessee

Soil erosion is one of the most common — and most underestimated — property problems in Middle Tennessee. It starts as a small channel alongside a driveway, a bare patch where grass won't grow, or silt washing up where it doesn't belong. Left alone, it deepens into a real structural problem: washed-out driveways, destabilized slopes, exposed foundations, and topsoil that took decades to build washing away in a few storm seasons.

The reason erosion is so prevalent here comes down to Tennessee's clay soil. Dense and nearly impermeable, Middle Tennessee clay sheds water the same way pavement does once it's saturated — instead of absorbing slowly, it sends water moving across the surface fast enough to dislodge and carry soil particles with it. Every storm that hits an unprotected slope or bare patch accelerates the process.

Dunnebacke Constructors installs permanent erosion control solutions across Hendersonville, Gallatin, Goodlettsville, and all of Middle Tennessee. We diagnose the actual source of the erosion problem and install the right fix — not a temporary patch that needs redoing every season.

Our Erosion Control Services

Riprap Installation

Angular crushed rock installed over geotextile fabric on slopes, drainage channels, and outfall areas. Absorbs water energy, protects soil, lasts for decades with zero maintenance.

Geotextile Fabric

Woven or non-woven filter fabric installed under riprap, gravel, and paved surfaces to separate soil layers, prevent piping, and allow drainage without erosion.

Swale Grading

Reshaping the land to create defined drainage channels that guide water away from vulnerable areas at controlled slopes that don't allow erosive velocities.

Erosion Matting & Seeding

Biodegradable erosion control matting holds seed and soil in place on slopes until vegetation establishes. Seed and straw for disturbed areas after any grading work.

Driveway Edge Repair

Rebuilding washed-out driveway edges, re-establishing proper base material, and installing riprap or swale protection to prevent the problem from recurring.

Slope Stabilization

Identifying and correcting unstable slopes through grading, rock armoring, and vegetation establishment before slope failure causes structural damage.

What Causes Erosion in Middle Tennessee

Tennessee Clay Soil + Heavy Rain

Middle Tennessee's dominant red and gray clay soil is a significant erosion risk factor that most homeowners don't know about. Clay repels rather than absorbs water once saturated. During a heavy storm, water on a clay-dominant slope moves fast — fast enough to dislodge fine soil particles and carry them downhill. A slope that would be stable in a sandier soil region can be actively eroding here in a modest rainstorm.

Concentrated Water Flow

Erosion doesn't happen uniformly across a yard — it follows concentrated flow paths. Downspouts that discharge water in a tight stream, driveways that funnel water off one edge, and culverts that concentrate flow at their outlet are all common sources of localized erosion. Anywhere water accelerates and narrows before hitting bare soil is a potential erosion point.

Disturbed or Bare Soil

Established vegetation is the most effective natural erosion control available — grass roots bind the top few inches of soil and dramatically reduce surface water velocity. Bare soil — from construction, landscaping work, grading, or turf damage — is immediately vulnerable. A freshly graded slope left without seeding and straw cover can lose inches of topsoil in a single heavy rain event.

Steep or Improperly Graded Slopes

Slopes that are too steep for vegetation to establish on their own, or slopes that funnel large volumes of water across a small area, require structural erosion control — riprap, matting, or regrading — rather than just seeding. This is one of the most common errors we see: seeding a problem slope without addressing the underlying flow concentration that's causing the erosion.

Missing or Undersized Drainage Infrastructure

Culverts that are too small to handle storm flows back up and overflow, scouring the channel and washing out the surrounding area. Drainage outlets without proper dissipation — bare soil at the end of a buried pipe or culvert — erode rapidly with each storm. These are infrastructure problems that require infrastructure solutions.

Our Process

1

Free On-Site Assessment

We walk the property and identify the actual source of the erosion — not just where it's visible, but where the water flow originates and what's causing the energy that's moving soil. Most erosion problems have a clear upstream cause that, once corrected, stops the damage permanently.

2

Diagnosis and Specific Estimate

We give you a specific written estimate explaining what we'll install, why it addresses the root cause, and what the total cost will be. No vague proposals — you know exactly what you're getting and what it costs before any work starts.

3

Installation

We grade, excavate, and install the specified solution — whether that's riprap over geotextile fabric, a swale regrading, driveway edge repair, or a combination. Owner Austyn Dunnebacke is on every job site.

4

Seeding and Restoration

Any disturbed soil that isn't rock-armored gets seeded and strawed immediately after installation. We don't leave bare soil exposed. Vegetation establishment is the last line of erosion defense, and we build it into every project.

Owner on every job. Austyn Dunnebacke personally assesses and works every project. You're not dealing with a salesperson and a crew you've never met — the same person who looks at your erosion problem is the one who fixes it.

How Much Does Erosion Control Cost?

Erosion control cost depends on the type of solution needed, the scope of the problem, and site conditions. Realistic ranges for Middle Tennessee residential projects:

The most accurate way to get a number is an on-site assessment. Erosion damage that looks similar in photos often has very different causes and scope. We provide free estimates with no obligation — you'll get a specific price before any work begins.

Areas We Serve

We provide erosion control services throughout Middle Tennessee, with quick response times across Sumner, Davidson, Wilson, Robertson, Montgomery, and Williamson counties.

Hendersonville, TN Gallatin, TN Goodlettsville, TN Millersville, TN White House, TN Springfield, TN Mount Juliet, TN Lebanon, TN Clarksville, TN Brentwood, TN Franklin, TN Portland, TN

Frequently Asked Questions

What causes soil erosion in Tennessee yards?
The most common causes are concentrated water flow from downspouts or driveways, bare soil on slopes with no vegetation cover, steep grades that generate erosive water velocity, and Tennessee's clay soil — which sheds water rather than absorbing it once saturated. Most erosion problems have a clear upstream water source that, once redirected or slowed, stops the downstream damage.
What is riprap and does it actually work?
Riprap is angular crushed rock — usually limestone or granite — installed over geotextile filter fabric on slopes, channels, and outfall areas. It works by absorbing the energy of moving water before it can dislodge soil. Properly installed riprap over geotextile fabric is one of the most durable, lowest-maintenance erosion control solutions available. It's been used in civil engineering for decades and when installed correctly, it lasts for decades with essentially no maintenance.
Can you repair erosion damage that's already occurred?
Yes. Most erosion damage — washed-out channels, failed slopes, crumbling driveway edges — can be repaired and stabilized. The repair involves removing loose material, regrading if needed, installing geotextile fabric and rock or matting, and seeding the surrounding area. The sooner damage is addressed, the less the repair costs — each rain event after damage begins makes it progressively worse.
How much does erosion control cost in Tennessee?
A riprap channel or slope protection installation for a typical residential problem runs $1,500–$5,000. Swale grading for a residential yard typically runs $800–$2,500. Full site stabilization for a property with multiple erosion sources can range from $5,000–$15,000+. The most accurate number comes from a free on-site assessment — scope varies widely based on what's actually causing the problem.
Do you also do drainage work with erosion control?
Yes — and most erosion problems are connected to a drainage problem upstream. Water that erodes soil is usually water that's moving too fast, concentrated in too small an area, or deposited where it doesn't belong. We typically address the drainage source and the erosion damage together, which is the only way to achieve a permanent fix. We offer swale grading, modified French drains, culvert installation, and downspout burial alongside our erosion control work.

Stop Erosion Before the Next Storm

Every rain that hits an unprotected slope or bare patch takes a little more of your soil with it. Get a free on-site estimate and find out exactly what it takes to fix it permanently.

Request Free Estimate 📞 Call (615) 887-1194