Waterfront access on Azalea & Camelia Lake starts with a properly engineered pier. The lake's small residential lake, community waterfront and localized wind chop, stormwater inflow define the structural requirements — from piling embedment in clay and sandy sediment to decking elevation and span design.
On Azalea & Camelia Lake, pier construction starts with a piling plan based on soil borings or probe tests in the clay and sandy sediment. Piling spacing, size and embedment depth are engineered — not guessed. The superstructure is then designed for dead load, live load, wind uplift and lateral forces from localized wind chop, stormwater inflow.
Shore Protect Team builds and repairs piers along the full Azalea & Camelia Lake shoreline — near local lakefront communities. Contact us for a free consultation and on-site assessment.

labor and materials
Pier building on Azalea & Camelia Lake designed for the combination of freshwater, clay and sandy sediment lakebed and localized wind chop, stormwater inflow that defines this lake. Pilings are sized and driven to the depth needed for long-term stability — not generic catalog specs.

labor and materials
Pier rehabilitation on Azalea & Camelia Lake: selective demolition, piling evaluation, decking and stringer replacement, and hardware upgrades. Shore Protect Team restores aging piers along Azalea & Camelia Lake near local lakefront communities to current structural standards.


Most residential piers on Azalea & Camelia Lake take 1 to 3 weeks from mobilization to completion. Timeline depends on pier length, water depth, clay and sandy sediment driving conditions, and weather. Larger commercial or multi-slip piers may take longer.
Starting at $20 per square foot for labor and materials on Azalea & Camelia Lake. Final cost depends on pier length, width, decking material, piling depth in clay and sandy sediment, and any covered or specialized features.
If pilings are sound and plumb, most superstructure damage can be repaired — rotted decking, damaged stringers, corroded hardware. If pilings are leaning, broken, or settled unevenly in the clay and sandy sediment, full replacement is usually more cost-effective.
Azalea & Camelia Lake experiences localized wind chop, stormwater inflow. Piers must be designed with adequate freeboard at high water and sufficient depth access at low water. Floating sections or adjustable gangways may be needed on reservoirs with large drawdown ranges.
Yes. Shore Protect Team handles all required coordination for pier projects on Azalea & Camelia Lake, from initial site assessment through construction completion. We serve waterfront properties near local lakefront communities.