Morgan's Point is a small peninsula at the mouth of the San Jacinto River where it enters Galveston Bay — one of the most demanding waterfront locations in the Houston area. Pier structures here face the simultaneous combination of San Jacinto River current, Galveston Bay tidal forces, and wake from Houston Ship Channel industrial vessel traffic. This combination of forces creates loading conditions significantly more demanding than any single waterway environment.
Bay mud and dense clay soils characterize Morgan's Point, with salt water tidal exchange from Galveston Bay affecting all shoreline structures. Salt water contact requires stainless or hot-dip galvanized hardware throughout. Aluminum framing with composite decking and full stainless hardware is the appropriate standard for Morgan's Point's uniquely demanding waterfront conditions.
Shore Protect Team LLC builds and repairs piers on the Morgan's Point peninsula at the San Jacinto River mouth. We design piers for the combined loading of Ship Channel vessel wake, river current, and bay tidal forces that define the most demanding pier environment in Harris County.
Send us photos of your Morgan's Point waterfront for a free assessment. Combined waterway loading and salt water conditions are the key factors we evaluate before recommending pier design.

labor and materials
Pier construction in Morgan's Point on the San Jacinto River mouth and Galveston Bay using aluminum and composite materials with marine-grade stainless hardware throughout, designed for the most demanding waterfront conditions in Harris County where Ship Channel vessel wake, river current, and bay tidal forces combine simultaneously.

labor and materials
Pier repair in Morgan's Point: restore stainless hardware corroded by Galveston Bay salt water on San Jacinto River mouth piers, reinforce pilings weakened by combined Ship Channel industrial wake and river current forces, and rebuild surge-damaged dock sections on this demanding peninsula waterfront.


Shore Protect Team provides pier construction and repair in Morgan's Point, TX for residential and commercial waterfront properties on San Jacinto River mouth and Galveston Bay. Our work covers new pier installation, piling replacement, decking repair, hardware restoration, and structural reinforcement. We assess each Morgan's Point site for Ship Channel industrial vessel wake, San Jacinto River current, and bay tidal forces simultaneously before recommending materials and design.
In Morgan's Point, TX, pier construction on San Jacinto River mouth and Galveston Bay is shaped by Ship Channel industrial vessel wake, San Jacinto River current, and bay tidal forces simultaneously. Bay mud and dense clay soils with full salt water tidal exchange from Galveston Bay. Structures on this exposed peninsula face the most demanding loading conditions in Harris County. Shore Protect Team evaluates site-specific exposure before specifying piling depth and material.
For Morgan's Point, TX piers on San Jacinto River mouth and Galveston Bay, aluminum framing with composite decking and full stainless hardware is the standard. Salt water contact from Galveston Bay requires stainless or hot-dip galvanized hardware throughout. Shore Protect Team selects materials rated for sustained marine exposure and combined waterway loading forces.
Yes. Shore Protect Team builds new piers and repairs existing ones for Morgan's Point, TX waterfront properties on San Jacinto River mouth and Galveston Bay. We assess each existing structure for damage from Ship Channel industrial vessel wake, San Jacinto River current, and bay tidal forces simultaneously before recommending targeted repair or full replacement. Many Morgan's Point waterfront properties benefit from focused repairs rather than complete reconstruction.
Send us photos of your waterfront property and your location in Morgan's Point, TX for a free preliminary consultation. Include photos of the waterside face, any visible piling damage, decking condition, and the connection points. Combined waterway loading and salt water conditions are the key factors we evaluate before recommending pier design.