Practical Installation Guide

Mounting a Framed Fence System to Concrete

Mounting to concrete is often the right choice for commercial perimeters, retrofit enclosures, plazas, loading areas, and projects where maintaining existing slabs is critical. This guide helps buyers, specifiers, and installers make reliable decisions before posts, anchors, and gate hardware are locked in.

Overview: Concrete Mounting Methods

Selecting the correct attachment approach at the beginning of design avoids costly rework later. Use these three methods as your primary framework.

Surface-Mounted Posts on Slab

Best for: Retrofits on sound slabs where demolition is not practical and schedule speed matters.

Watch for: Base plate footprint, edge distance, anchor embedment depth, and crack category in the slab.

Core-Drilled Post Sleeves

Best for: Projects needing cleaner visual integration, deeper engagement, or improved post concealment.

Watch for: Core location tolerance, sleeve grouting procedure, and compatibility with reinforcing steel.

Raised Curb or Stem Wall Attachment

Best for: Commercial runs along grade transitions, retaining edges, and perimeter conditions with elevation shifts.

Watch for: Wall reinforcement, anchor spacing from wall edges, and hardware corrosion class in wet zones.

Key Decision Factors Before You Finalize Posts and Anchors

Slab thickness and condition

Confirm thickness, reinforcement presence, cracking, and concrete quality before finalizing post and anchor selections.

Anchor selection

Match anchors to cracked/non-cracked concrete conditions, required tension/shear values, and embedment limits.

Wind load

Wind exposure, panel infill type, and site orientation affect post demand and anchor group loading.

Fence height and span

Higher panels and wider module spacing increase bending demand and can require stronger post sections.

Drainage and water exposure

Standing water near base plates accelerates corrosion and can reduce long-term connection performance.

Corrosion and environment

Select coatings and fasteners for coastal, industrial, chlorinated, or freeze-thaw exposure conditions.

Gate loads and reinforcement

Gate hinge and latch posts carry concentrated dynamic loads and often need heavier posts or local reinforcement.

Step-by-Step Planning and Installation Guidance

  • 1) Evaluate the substrate: Survey slab age, cracks, slope, thickness, and edge conditions. Identify repair zones before fabrication starts.
  • 2) Confirm layout and spacing: Set control lines by panel module and gate openings so post centers align with actual framed system dimensions.
  • 3) Choose the mounting method: Use base-plate, core-drill sleeve, or curb/stem-wall mounting based on structural demand and finish requirements.
  • 4) Select anchors and hardware: Specify anchor type, embedment, spacing, and corrosion rating. Confirm torque and installation requirements up front.
  • 5) Account for gates and corner loads: Upgrade hinge/latch and corner posts where needed, and verify support for repetitive gate cycling and impact loads.
  • 6) Verify alignment, drainage, and support: Before final tightening, recheck post plumbness, panel line, drainage flow, and footing/support continuity.

Field-Ready Tip

Build your layout and anchor verification into one repeatable checklist used by the installer, project manager, and inspector. Shared checklists reduce drift between design intent and field execution.

Common Mistakes and Issue Patterns

Undersized slab assumptions

Treating thin decorative concrete like a structural slab leads to early anchor and alignment failures.

Poor anchor choice

Using generic anchors without checking load tables, cracked concrete ratings, or required embedment.

Ignoring gate loads

Applying line-post details to hinge and latch locations often causes premature movement and hardware wear.

Water collection at base plates

Failing to manage drainage traps moisture at steel interfaces and increases corrosion risk.

Assuming all concrete conditions are equal

Surface appearance does not reveal reinforcement, voids, or crack behavior—field verification is mandatory.

How This Connects to Perimtec Systems

Perimtec framed fence systems are configured as coordinated assemblies—not isolated parts. Post profiles, panel modules, and gate hardware are selected together so concrete attachment details support long-term performance, alignment, and serviceability.

Whether your project calls for steel frame systems, composite infill, or mixed privacy/security zones, our team can help map mounting method, post schedule, and gate reinforcement into a clear submittal path.

Ready to Specify or Install a Concrete-Mounted Fence System?

Share your layout, slab information, and gate requirements. We will help you choose a Perimtec system, mounting strategy, and hardware package that aligns with your performance and schedule goals.