New Braunfels is surrounded by access to Lake Travis, Lake LBJ, Inks Lake, Lake Buchanan, and Lake Marble Falls - LCRA-managed Highland Lakes on the Colorado River that provides the waterfront living opportunities that attract lakefront homebuyers and recreational property investors to this region. Every dock, pier, bulkhead, and retaining wall built near New Braunfels must be designed for the specific conditions of the water body it fronts - including managed water level ranges, wave exposure, and the substrate conditions at the water's edge. New Braunfels area waterfront owners who need construction or repair work benefit from contractors who know these local systems.
Central Texas waterfront construction near New Braunfels on LCRA Highland Lakes involves LCRA permit coordination, rocky limestone Hill Country substrate, and the lakes' managed water levels that can vary significantly during drought conditions. LCRA shoreline permits specify approved dock dimensions and materials, and rocky substrate at many Hill Country sites requires augered or rock-anchor pile systems.
Shore Protect Team delivers Marine Contractors in New Braunfels, TX near New Braunfels on the LCRA Highland Lakes. We construct dock systems sized for LCRA water level schedules, install pile systems for rocky limestone substrate, and build shoreline protection systems. LCRA shoreline permit coordination is part of our project process.
Contact Shore Protect Team for a free site consultation - send your location and site photos and we will assess your shoreline and outline the right approach for your property.











Shore Protect Team provides bank stabilization, retaining wall installation, dock and pier construction, and waterfront repair for Guadalupe River and Canyon Lake properties near New Braunfels in Comal County. New Braunfels sits on the Guadalupe River at its confluence with the Comal River - the city's riverfront has heavy recreational tubing traffic from the nationally known Comal and Guadalupe River float runs, and properties along the river near New Braunfels experience both current and recreational boat traffic loading on bank protection systems. Canyon Lake to the northwest provides additional waterfront property opportunities in Comal County for dock construction and retaining wall work.
The Guadalupe River near New Braunfels carries some of the highest recreational tubing traffic in the United States during summer weekends - tens of thousands of tubers float the Comal and upper Guadalupe annually, creating continuous watercraft and pedestrian traffic that erodes unprotected riverbanks more aggressively than comparable current-only conditions would produce. Riparian bank protection near New Braunfels on the Guadalupe must handle both the hydraulic force of the river's limestone-fed flow and the physical contact from tubing traffic that wouldn't be a factor on less-used Texas rivers. Shore Protect Team designs bank protection for New Braunfels area Guadalupe properties for these combined recreational and hydraulic loading conditions.
Bank work on the Guadalupe River near New Braunfels requires TPWD water rights coordination and potentially Army Corps of Engineers Section 404 permits for work in or adjacent to jurisdictional waters of the United States. The Guadalupe River's spring-fed limestone flow carries exceptional water quality and supports significant aquatic habitat - in-water work must be timed and designed to minimize sedimentation and habitat disturbance in this high-quality central Texas river. Shore Protect Team coordinates applicable permits for Guadalupe River bank work in Comal County near New Braunfels.
Yes, Shore Protect Team serves waterfront properties on Canyon Lake in Comal County accessible from New Braunfels. Canyon Lake is a Corps of Engineers reservoir on the Guadalupe River northwest of the city - a popular recreational lake with clear water, limestone and rocky shorelines, and Corps Section 26a permit requirements for all dock and waterfront construction. The rocky limestone substrate at Canyon Lake requires core-drilled piling in many locations, similar to the Hill Country lake conditions on the LCRA Highland Lakes.
Send Shore Protect Team your property location near New Braunfels in Comal County - Guadalupe River or Canyon Lake - along with photos of your bank, shoreline, and existing structures. We assess the conditions and permit requirements for your specific New Braunfels area waterfront location and provide a preliminary cost estimate. Contact Shore Protect Team to begin your Comal County waterfront project.