Screw Piles: The Quiet Revolution in Foundations
- 5 minutes ago
- 2 min read
Imagine building a foundation without the mud, the mess, or the wait. No concrete trucks, no digging, no days of curing time. That’s the magic of screw piles - the unsung heroes of modern construction.
At ABC Anchors, we’ve been pioneering UK-made screw piles that aren’t just an alternative - they’re a smarter way to build.

What Makes Screw Piles Different?
Traditional foundations fight the ground. Screw piles work with it. By screwing steel piles directly into the soil, each pile locks in strength and stability immediately. It’s fast, precise, and remarkably efficient.
Here’s why builders, homeowners, and architects are choosing them:
Speed That Surprises: A foundation that usually takes weeks? With screw piles, it can be ready in hours. Projects start sooner, deadlines stay intact.
Gentle on the Ground: Root systems, uneven terrain, or sensitive sites? No problem. Screw piles cause minimal disturbance, leaving the landscape intact.
Built on Precision: Installation torque tells us exactly how much load each pile can bear. That means no guesswork - just reliable engineering.
Adaptable & Future-Proof: Plans change. Buildings expand. Screw piles can be removed, relocated, or reused - making them as flexible as your project needs to be.
Real-World Applications
Screw piles aren’t just for big commercial jobs - they’re incredibly versatile:
Modular homes and log cabins
New builds
Extensions and garden offices
Decking, pergolas, and terraces
Temporary or semi-permanent structures
Underpinning
Each screw pile is designed to last over 100 years and to withstand the toughest UK conditions.
Why ABC Anchors?
We’re not just selling steel - we’re offering peace of mind. Every pile is manufactured in our Wiltshire facility, engineered to exacting standards, and proven across hundreds of projects nationwide.
Screw piles are changing the way we think about foundations: faster, cleaner, smarter. If you’re ready to build without compromise, it’s time to screw in the future.
.jpg)




Comments