
Vault, Handhole & Pedestal Installation
Access points where the network gets spliced, pulled, and maintained.
Every underground network needs access points — vaults, handholes, and pedestals where cable is pulled, spliced, and maintained over its life. AMS excavates, sets, and grades these structures to spec, tied into the conduit run so the system works as one. Proper placement and grade now is what keeps the network serviceable later. It's installed as part of the full job scope.
Serves
Vaults, handholes, and pedestals go in wherever the network needs access — splice points, pull points, and long runs that have to be reachable for service. Placement is set by the conduit design, not added as an afterthought.
Vault & Handhole on the Gulf Coast
Graded against flooding
A high water table and heavy Gulf Coast rainfall mean access structures have to be set and graded so they don't sit in standing water. AMS sets traffic-rated vaults to final grade with drainage in mind, so crews can splice in them for years.
Tied into the run as one system
Each structure is placed and aligned with the conduit so pulls and splices flow cleanly — not dropped in and connected later.
Vault & Handhole rarely travels alone
AMS combines this with the rest of the scope so one crew owns the whole route.
Vault & Handhole — FAQ
What access structures does AMS set?
Vaults, handholes, and pedestals — excavated, set, and graded to spec, and tied into the conduit run so the system works as one.
Why is placement important?
Proper grade and placement now is what keeps the network serviceable later — these are the points where fiber is pulled and spliced over its life.
Need vault & handhole on your next job?
Tell us the route and spec. AMS self-performs vault & handhole as part of the full underground scope — call (251) 943-0267 or request a bid.