When you’re working around underground services, guessing is where things go wrong.
Striking a live cable or damaging a water main doesn’t just slow a job down. It shuts sites, adds cost and puts people at risk. That’s why more crews across Queensland are using vacuum excavation for service locating.
It gives you a clean, controlled way to expose what’s underground before you commit to digging.
What service locating looks like on site
Service locating is about finding and confirming underground assets before excavation starts.
That includes:
- electrical conduits
- water and sewer lines
- gas infrastructure
- comms and fibre
Using vacuum excavation, operators break up the soil with water or air and remove it with a vac truck. The result is a clear visual of what’s below without damaging it.
Why contractors are switching to vacuum excavation
Accurate exposure without guesswork
Instead of digging blind, crews can physically verify asset locations.
This is especially useful when:
- plans are outdated
- markings are unclear
- multiple services run close together
You see exactly what you’re dealing with before moving forward.
Lower risk across the job
Traditional digging methods come with a real chance of hitting something you shouldn’t.
Vacuum excavation removes that risk layer by:
- avoiding mechanical contact
- allowing controlled soil removal
- keeping assets intact
This aligns with the push toward non-destructive digging across civil and utility work
Keeps projects moving
Delays often come from unexpected service strikes or having to stop and reassess.
With vacuum excavation:
- crews can confirm locations early
- less rework is needed
- approvals and inspections move faster
It’s a smoother workflow from start to finish.
Where this method is used across Queensland
Civil construction sites
Before trenching or bulk excavation, teams use vacuum excavation to confirm service positions and avoid clashes.
Urban works in Brisbane and Gold Coast
Tight corridors and dense service networks make traditional excavation risky. Vacuum excavation allows crews to work in smaller, controlled sections.
Utility maintenance and upgrades
When accessing specific points in existing networks, precision matters. This method allows direct access without disturbing surrounding ground.
When it makes sense to use vacuum excavation
There are clear situations where this approach is the right call:
- working near live services
- limited access sites
- high-risk infrastructure zones
- projects with strict safety requirements
It’s also a strong option for urgent works where accuracy and speed both matter.
Working with the right crew
The equipment is only part of it. The operator makes the difference.
At APU Excavations & Rentals, teams are used to working across civil, commercial and residential sites, handling everything from service locating through to clean-up.
Their setup allows vacuum excavation to be combined with other services when needed, keeping projects efficient and reducing the need to bring in multiple contractors.
Vacuum excavation on your next project
If your job involves working around underground services, this method gives you a safer and more controlled way to move forward.
You can review available vacuum excavation services in Brisbane here:
https://allpumpedup.com.au/vacuum-excavation-brisbane/
FAQs
What is the difference between service locating and potholing?
Service locating is the overall process of identifying underground services. Potholing is the step where those services are physically exposed to confirm their position.
Is vacuum excavation suitable near live utilities?
Yes. It’s widely used around live electrical, gas and water services because it reduces the risk of damage during excavation.
Does vacuum excavation slow the job down?
It may take a bit more care at the start, but it avoids costly mistakes. Most projects end up moving faster overall.