Pond builders in Greene County, Missouri
Looking for a pond builder in Greene County, Missouri? Ozark Pond Builders connects Greene County landowners with licensed local pond and excavation contractors for farm ponds, recreational lakes, dredging, and dam work. Most private ponds in this area fall below Missouri's 35 foot dam permit threshold, so qualifying projects can move forward without a state dam safety permit.
Greene County is the population center of the region, and it has a quirk that matters for ponds: a drainage divide runs right through it. South and central Greene County, including Springfield and Republic, drains to the White River basin by way of the James River and Wilson Creek. The north end drains the other way, to the Missouri and Osage basin, through the Little Sac River that feeds Fellows Lake and McDaniel Lake.
That divide is the one local detail to get right. For a project that affects a stream and needs a federal Section 404 review, White River basin sites go to the US Army Corps of Engineers Little Rock District and Osage basin sites go to the Kansas City District, so which office reviews your pond depends on where your land sits. Confirm it for your parcel. On the state side, most private farm ponds have a dam under Missouri’s 35 foot threshold and need no state dam safety permit, as our Missouri pond permit guide explains.
The soils are classic Springfield Plateau: cherty and low in clay, so many sites need a clay core or a liner to hold water. Our will my pond hold water guide covers it, and the NRCS Web Soil Survey maps your ground. For watershed sizing, plan on roughly 10 to 20 acres of drainage per surface acre (watershed sizing guide).
For a qualifying agricultural pond, the Greene County SWCD and NRCS office in Springfield can point you to cost share; see our Missouri pond cost share guide. When you are ready, we connect you with one licensed local contractor who works in Greene County.
Local pond planning facts
- County seat
- Springfield
- Primary drainages
- Greene County straddles a drainage divide. The south and central county drains to the White River basin (James River, Wilson Creek, Pearson Creek, and Lake Springfield on the James). The north drains to the Missouri and Osage basin (the Little Sac River, impounded as Fellows Lake and McDaniel Lake, and the Sac River headwaters).
- Soils and water holding
- Springfield Plateau soils, commonly cherty silt loams on the slopes with fragipan silt loams on the ridgetops. Generally low in clay. Most upland sites are low in clay and need a compacted clay core, imported clay, or a liner to hold water. Confirm your parcel with the NRCS Web Soil Survey.
- Army Corps district (Section 404)
- Varies by basin. James River and White River basin sites (Springfield, Republic, Wilson Creek, Lake Springfield) fall under the Little Rock District, while the northern Little Sac and Sac River (Osage basin) sites fall under the Kansas City District. Because the divide runs through the county, confirm the reviewing office for your specific parcel.
- Soil and Water Conservation District
- Greene County Soil and Water Conservation District, in Springfield, co-located with the USDA Service Center and NRCS field office. Look up current contact details in the USDA Service Center locator.
- Floodplain and grading
- The city of Springfield requires a land disturbance permit and, as a state approved local program, administers floodplain development inside the city. Unincorporated Greene County issues floodplain development permits in mapped flood hazard areas, and Republic has its own floodplain and land disturbance rules. Confirm the rules for your site.
Towns in Greene County
Services in Greene County
Helpful guides
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