Field operations for concrete
Document the pour, the crew, and the materials, before it sets
A pour is a one-way door. Once the concrete sets, the prep, the rebar, and the conditions are locked in for good, and you cannot redo a Tuesday pour on Wednesday. Solis is the field-first system that captures the formwork, the rebar, the delivery, and who was on the pour, time-stamped, so the most unforgiving work in construction is fully on the record.
The pour, on the clock
From forms to full cure, timed to the minute
Concrete does not wait, and the work cannot be redone. Solis logs the pour, the truck times, and the cure window, so the record is set the moment the work happens.
Forms set
Layout and rebar checked against the plan.
Pour
Truck times and yardage logged on site.
Finish
Float, trowel, and cure start photographed.
Cure
Day 6 of 28, on schedule.
How a day runs on Solis
- 1
Crew checks in before the pour
Workers check in by GPS on arrival, recording who is on the pour and that prep is underway.
- 2
Prep and delivery get documented
Geotagged photos capture formwork, rebar, and the delivered mix, time-stamped before the concrete covers it all.
- 3
The pour and finish get proven
Each stage attaches to the job, so the pour and the finish are on the record, with the crew and conditions noted.
- 4
The slab carries its own history
When the work is done, the slab has a complete, ordered record: prep, materials, crew, and finish, ready if it is ever questioned.
What the field gets out of it
Document prep before the truck arrives
Everything that matters on a pour is buried by the pour: subgrade, formwork, rebar, vapor barrier. Solis pins geotagged photos to the job before concrete goes down, so the prep is proven and an inspector or GC can verify it after it is invisible.
Know who was on the pour, and when
A pour is time-critical and crew-dependent. GPS check-ins record who was on site and when work started, so when a slab is questioned weeks later you know exactly who poured it and the conditions on the day.
Track the mix and the delivery
The wrong mix or a late truck can ruin a pour. Solis lets the crew document the delivery, the ticket, and the conditions, attached to the job, so a question about the concrete itself has an answer in the record.
Schedule pours around the things you cannot control
Pours hinge on weather, temperature, and truck availability. Knowing where each crew and job stands through the proof-of-work chain lets you sequence pours and move crews to the slab that is ready, not the one on the original plan.
English and Spanish, side by side
Concrete crews are frequently Spanish-speaking. Solis runs in English and Spanish at once, so every worker sees the pour, their check-in, and their tasks in their own language while you keep the schedule in yours.
Questions concrete contractors ask
- Once concrete sets, the prep is gone. Can Solis preserve it?
- That is exactly why concrete crews use it. Geotagged photos of subgrade, formwork, and rebar pin to the job before the pour, so the buried prep is proven and verifiable after the concrete covers it.
- If a slab gets questioned later, can I tell who poured it?
- Yes. GPS check-ins record who was on the pour and when it started, so even weeks later you know the exact crew and the conditions on the day, instead of relying on memory.
- Can the crew document the mix and the delivery?
- They can attach the delivery, the ticket, and site conditions to the job. If anyone questions the concrete itself, the answer is in the record rather than in a phone call to the supplier.
- Pours depend on weather and truck timing. Does the app help me sequence them?
- Knowing where each crew and job stands in real time lets you move crews to the slab that is actually ready to pour. You sequence around what you cannot control instead of sticking to a plan that no longer fits.