Boat Docks in Richland-Chambers Reservoir, TX

Boat DocksRichland-Chambers Reservoir

Boat Docks in Richland-Chambers Reservoir, TX

Custom boat docks, boat lifts, and waterfront structures built to last — from personal lakefront docks to full marina installations.

Boat Docks on the ground in Richland-Chambers Reservoir

Operated by Tarrant Regional Water District, with the same TRWD permitting framework as Cedar Creek but a different shoreline-management plan. Richland-Chambers has long, low-slope coves with submerged timber and sediment plumes — both dredging and dock placement require careful sonar work upfront. We barge-mobilize most jobs here.

Recent work near: Corsicana, Streetman, Wortham, Kerens.

What affects the price in Richland-Chambers Reservoir

  • Dock size, shape, and total square footage
  • Decking material — pressure-treated, composite, or aluminum
  • Number and type of pilings (wood, steel, or concrete)
  • Boat lift size and capacity
  • Water depth and bottom conditions

Quick FAQ

Full FAQ →

What permits are needed for a boat dock?

Texas dock permits depend on which body of water you're on:

  • Cedar Creek Lake — Tarrant Regional Water District (TRWD). Typical cycle: 3–6 weeks.
  • Lake Athens — Athens Municipal Water Authority (AMWA). 2–4 weeks; strict cap-elevation rules.
  • Lake Palestine — Upper Neches River Municipal Water Authority (UNRMWA). 3–5 weeks.
  • Lake Tyler — City of Tyler shoreline office. Pre-clearance required before fabrication.
  • Richland-Chambers — TRWD (same as Cedar Creek, different shoreline plan). 3–6 weeks.
  • Private impoundments — Usually no agency permit, but HOA architectural review still applies.

We pull every permit as part of the contract — you sign once and we run the agency loop. Full breakdown in our permits article.

What decking material should I choose?

Three serious options:

  • Pressure-treated pine — cheapest upfront. Requires annual sealing. Most common.
  • Composite — mid-tier price, no sealing, color-stable for 10–15 years.
  • Marine-grade aluminum — premium. Stays cooler underfoot, lasts 40+ years, splinter-free.

Families who walk their dock barefoot in July almost always upgrade to composite or aluminum on the second dock. If you'll only own the house for 3–5 years, pressure-treated is the right call.

Can you build a covered dock or boat house?

Yes. We build covered single-slip docks, double-slip boat houses, and open T-head docks. Covered structures need additional permitting on most lake authorities (TRWD on Cedar Creek and Richland-Chambers regulates roof height and cap elevation tightly) — we package that into the application.

If you're considering adding a roof later, tell us at the design stage. Adding a roof to an existing dock often requires structural retrofit of the pilings, which is more expensive than building it covered from day one.

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