Waterfront access along Lake Marble Falls requires walkways and boardwalks engineered for the lake's granite and limestone terrain, freshwater environment, and limited fetch on narrow lake, dam-controlled flow, boat traffic. Elevated boardwalks cross wet and flood-prone sections; at-grade paths serve stable upland areas.
Shore Protect Team builds walkways from five material systems: treated wood boardwalks, composite decking, aluminum framing, poured concrete, and compacted gravel. Each has its niche — wood and composite for elevated sections, concrete and gravel for at-grade paths, aluminum for low-maintenance longevity.
Contact Shore Protect Team for a free consultation on walkway and boardwalk construction along Lake Marble Falls — serving waterfront properties near Marble Falls.

labor and materials
Boardwalk and walkway construction on Lake Marble Falls using treated timber, composite decking, aluminum framing, poured concrete, and compacted gravel. Shore Protect Team builds elevated and at-grade pathways that handle the lake's freshwater environment and granite and limestone substrate while providing year-round access to the waterfront.


Treated wood and composite are best for elevated sections over granite and limestone terrain on Lake Marble Falls. Concrete handles at-grade high-traffic areas. Gravel is the budget option for informal paths. Aluminum provides maximum longevity for elevated structures.
Starting at $20/sq ft for labor and materials on Lake Marble Falls. Gravel paths cost less; elevated composite boardwalks on pilings cost more. Final price depends on length, width, material, elevation, and granite and limestone substrate conditions.
Lake Marble Falls is subject to limited fetch on narrow lake, dam-controlled flow, boat traffic. Elevated boardwalks are designed above the flood elevation. At-grade paths in flood zones use permeable materials like gravel that drain quickly. Shore Protect Team designs every walkway for the lake's full water level range.
Yes. Elevated boardwalks on driven pilings minimize ground disturbance — the structure spans over the granite and limestone terrain rather than grading through it. This approach is preferred in sensitive shoreline areas and marshy sections along Lake Marble Falls.
Yes. Shore Protect Team handles all required coordination for walkway and boardwalk projects on Lake Marble Falls, from site assessment through construction. We serve waterfront properties near Marble Falls.