U.S. Pipe’s cover photo
U.S. Pipe

U.S. Pipe

Utilities

Birmingham, Alabama 14,241 followers

Setting the standard for the water/wastewater industry for over a century.

About us

U.S. Pipe continues to lead the industry through the principles the company was established on over 100 years ago: Innovation, Service and Quality. But what really sets U.S. Pipe apart isn't just our pipe. It's all the other superior products we manufacture. From restrained joints to welded outlets and fittings, we've been producing dependable and economical solutions for our customers for over 100 years.

Website
http://www.uspipe.com
Industry
Utilities
Company size
1,001-5,000 employees
Headquarters
Birmingham, Alabama
Type
Privately Held
Founded
1899
Specialties
Ductile Iron Pipe, Joint Restraint, Ductile Iron Fittings, Special Coatings & Linings, and Metallic Zinc Coating

Locations

Employees at U.S. Pipe

Updates

  • U.S. Pipe reposted this

    Nearly 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit. That’s the kind of heat required to turn recycled scrap metal into ductile iron pipe carrying drinking water across the United States. At the U.S. Pipe foundry in Alabama, Jeff Mason, PE explains the chemistry and quality control behind the molten iron process. As iron flows from the cupola, workers carefully monitor the material, remove sulfur with lime, and scrape away impurities known as slag before the iron is poured into pipe molds. The chemistry matters. Small variations in the metal can affect the long-term strength, durability, and performance of pipe expected to remain underground for decades under pressure. It’s a reminder that modern water infrastructure depends not only on heavy industry and massive machinery, but also on precision metallurgy and constant testing behind the scenes. Watch the full episode of How Water Works at https://lnkd.in/d4ia-juc

  • U.S. Pipe reposted this

    Old cars. Brake rotors. Rebar. Industrial scrap. Inside the U.S. Pipe foundry in Alabama, all of it can become drinking water infrastructure. Jeff Mason, PE explains how different grades of recycled metal are blended together before being melted down and transformed into ductile iron pipe. Giant magnets load shredded cars, engine components, and scrap steel into massive charges headed for the cupola, where temperatures climb to 2,800°F. The scale of the recycling operation is enormous. Tons of metal that might otherwise become waste are continuously repurposed into pipe engineered to last underground for decades while carrying drinking water to communities across the United States. It’s a reminder that some of the country’s most important sustainability and infrastructure stories are happening inside places most people never see. Full episode at https://lnkd.in/eeKAYV8b

  • View organization page for U.S. Pipe

    14,241 followers

    When the call came in, our team delivered. Proud of the incredible team at U.S. Pipe, alongside our partners at Core & Main and Blair, for coordinating rapid pipe deliveries over the weekend to support emergency repairs on a prestressed concrete cylinder pipe water main break in Thomaston, CT. Glad we could provide a durable ductile iron solution to help get this line back up and running. That’s teamwork in action. #uspipe #ductileiron https://hubs.la/Q04h_XgP0

  • U.S. Pipe reposted this

    Most of America’s drinking water infrastructure is completely invisible to the public. Beneath streets, neighborhoods, and cities are millions of miles of buried pipe quietly moving water every day. I recently went inside the U.S. Pipe foundry in Alabama to see how that infrastructure is actually manufactured — and the scale, heat, and precision of the process were incredible. Old cars, appliances, and industrial scrap are melted at more than 2,800°F and transformed into ductile iron pipe engineered to last up to 100 years underground. The pipe is made with more than 90% recycled metal and designed to withstand earthquakes, floods, wildfires, pressure, corrosion, and decades of use. What stood out to me most was the combination of heavy industry, chemistry, engineering, sustainability, and advanced manufacturing all coming together around something most people rarely think about: the pipe carrying drinking water. This short video is a quick tour through the foundry and the manufacturing process. Full episode with Jeff Mason, PE at https://lnkd.in/eRG_Vcxw

  • Thank you for highlighting the people, process, and innovation behind ductile iron pipe manufacturing. We���re proud to help build and maintain the critical infrastructure that delivers safe, reliable water to communities across America. Appreciate the opportunity to showcase how sustainability, durability, and quality come together at U.S. Pipe!

    View organization page for waterloop

    12,189 followers

    America’s drinking water infrastructure depends on more than 2 million miles of pipe buried beneath streets and communities across the country. In this episode of How Water Works, Jeff Mason, PE leads a tour inside the U.S. Pipe foundry in Alabama to show how ductile iron pipe is manufactured — from recycled scrap metal to critical underground infrastructure. The episode follows the intense process of melting old cars, appliances, and industrial metal into pipe engineered to last for generations and withstand earthquakes, floods, and decades of pressure underground. It also explores overlooked sustainability stories inside heavy industry, including industrial water reuse systems, emissions reductions through electric induction furnaces, and how more than 90% recycled material becomes essential infrastructure. Along the way, Mason explains the chemistry, testing, coatings, and cement linings that help ensure drinking water remains safe and reliable as it moves through these systems. From molten iron hotter than lava to finished pipe headed everywhere from Manhattan to small-town America, the story pulls back the curtain on one of the most important — and invisible — parts of how water works. Watch the tour at https://lnkd.in/e2sNGF-r

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