Experienced, Professional, Cost-Effective Environmental Management Solutions

Serving Clients Nationwide

Sand County Environmental, Inc., is a nationally-recognized environmental engineering firm providing a full array of phytoremediation and traditional remediation solutions to private and public service sectors. Our work is most often conducted for owners of landfills, lenders, retail and wholesale agricultural chemical storage facilities, local and state governments, and other property owners where soil, groundwater, or stormwater management issues are of concern.

Phytoremediation

National leader in providing phytoremediation (plant-based) solutions for pollutants in soil, groundwater, and stormwater.

Ag-Chem Industry

Assisting ag-chem facilities manage environmental issues including facility design, stormwater management, and nutrient and pesticide remediation.

Solid Waste

Providing a range of investigation and monitoring services, including sustainable, on-site leachate management systems.

Environmental Services

Providing Phase I and Phase II ESAs, site investigations, remediations, due diligence, wetland services, and expert witness.

Wastewater/Engineered Wetlands

Alternative treatment systems and artificial wetlands to treat leachate, wastewater, and stormwater through the use of plants, soil, and microbes.

Project Gallery

Samples of work conducted by Sand County Environmental.

From Our Facebook

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Sand County Environmental has designed, installed, and maintained irrigation for phytoremediation, stormwater, and wastewater applications. These irrigation systems range from low-flow dosing systems to 200,000 gallon per day stormwater systems. As such, Sand County Environmental has a wide range of irrigation experience, including experience with centrifugal, submersible, peristaltic, and downhole pumps, solar-powered systems, spray and aboveground/underground drip irrigation systems, automated systems, and many other types of applications. Whether you need an irrigation system for a new tree or prairie plantation, or are looking for irrigation options for green stormwater infrastructure, reach out to Sand County Environmental for all your irrigation needs! ... See MoreSee Less

Sand County Environmental has designed, installed, and maintained irrigation for phytoremediation, stormwater, and wastewater applications. These irrigation systems range from low-flow dosing systems to 200,000 gallon per day stormwater systems. As such, Sand County Environmental has a wide range of irrigation experience, including experience with centrifugal, submersible, peristaltic, and downhole pumps, solar-powered systems, spray and aboveground/underground drip irrigation systems, automated systems, and many other types of applications. Whether you need an irrigation system for a new tree or prairie plantation, or are looking for irrigation options for green stormwater infrastructure, reach out to Sand County Environmental for all your irrigation needs!

... See MoreSee Less

Ever wondered what soil contamination looks like beneath the ground surface? This is a perfect example from an excavation Sand County Environmental completed in 2022. The contaminant of concern for this dig was diesel fuel, and this soil cross-section gives you a good idea as to what it can look like below ground when soil becomes contaminated. On this particular occasion, Sand County Environmental oversaw the removal of over 2,000 tons of contaminated soil from a site located nearby one of the United States’ major rivers! ... See MoreSee Less

Ever wondered what soil contamination looks like beneath the ground surface? This is a perfect example from an excavation Sand County Environmental completed in 2022. The contaminant of concern for this dig was diesel fuel, and this soil cross-section gives you a good idea as to what it can look like below ground when soil becomes contaminated. On this particular occasion, Sand County Environmental oversaw the removal of over 2,000 tons of contaminated soil from a site located nearby one of the United States’ major rivers!

Comment on Facebook

An arrow pointing to it would be nice. I’d think the gray is mottling of clay, but maybe I’m wrong? Thanks