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    Beneath the vines: precast cellar arch design lessons for ground engineers

    December 12, 2025|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Beneath the vines: precast cellar arch design lessons for ground engineers

    First reported on Roads & Infrastructure (AU)

    30 Second Briefing

    A partially buried precast concrete arch forms the main structure of a new underground cellar and tasting room at Gurneys Cider in Foster, South Gippsland, integrating the facility into the vineyard landscape. Designed, engineered and manufactured by National Precast Master Precaster Geoquest Australia, the arch system uses factory-made concrete elements to achieve controlled geometry and rapid installation compared with in-situ construction. The project shows how standard precast bridge and culvert technology can be adapted for small-span, earth-covered architectural spaces with stable thermal and moisture conditions.

    Technical Brief

    • Partially buried configuration reduces visible superstructure, limiting visual impact across the vineyard slopes.

    Our Take

    Within our 237 Infrastructure stories, very few focus on South Gippsland or smaller Victorian centres like Foster, so this piece helps fill a geographic gap compared with the usual concentration on Melbourne and major highway corridors.

    National Precast’s appearance here aligns with a cluster of project-tagged coverage where precast is being used to shorten on-site construction windows, which is particularly relevant for constrained regional sites that must limit disruption to local traffic and tourism.

    Geoquest Australia’s involvement signals that detailed ground investigation is becoming standard even on modest regional works in Victoria, which typically reduces construction risk on soft or variable agricultural soils common in South Gippsland.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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