Footing steel, termite pretreat, and post tension cables typically mean three separate vendors, three sets of scheduling calls, and three invoices on the same pour. Security Building Services and Supply folds all three into one Owasso operation, and the combination is more coherent than it first sounds. The company cuts and fabricates rebar to order, applies liquid termiticide before the slab goes down, and sets post tension cables to engineering specs. On a residential or commercial pour those jobs all land within the same narrow window of a project, which is the practical reason bundling them makes sense rather than a marketing convenience.
The roots here go back further than the current service lineup would lead you to expect. Security Building Services and Supply started in 1969 as Security Pest Control under Ron Hendrix, and Dane Hendrix runs it now. The pest-control side is the original business, with rebar and cable work grown up around it over the decades. That history matters more on the termite pretreat side than anywhere else. Once the concrete cures, the pretreat is invisible. A builder has to trust it was done right, and knowing the same family has been doing termiticide work in northeast Oklahoma since 1969 does more to establish that confidence than any certification badge.
Rebar and what the fabrication claim means in practice
Security Building Services and Supply describes itself as one of the largest commercial-grade rebar suppliers in the Tulsa area. The useful detail inside that claim is the custom-cut and fabricated footing steel. A contractor ordering steel cut to the footing dimensions avoids the on-site labor and material waste that come from buying stock lengths and cutting them down. On a large commercial slab with significant linear footage, that becomes a real line item, not a convenience. Security Building Services and Supply pitches this to both residential and commercial clients, so the scale is meant to flex both directions.
What the site omits is lead time, minimum order, and delivery logistics. Those are the first questions a project manager will ask before placing any order with a new supplier. The "commercial-grade" label sets an expectation that a sample order or a site visit would confirm or not. The framing is confident; the proof comes later in the relationship.
Termite pretreat and post tension cables
The termite pretreat is the most clearly defined service Security Building Services and Supply offers. It is a liquid termiticide application under Oklahoma state law, backed by a five-year warranty. The legal framing tells a builder the work meets a regulated standard. The warranty length gives a homeowner recourse that extends past the first year of normal settling and small complaints. For a service applied once and then sealed under a finished floor, five years of coverage is close to the most reassuring thing a provider can put in writing.
Post tension cables round out the three services, installed in concrete forms according to engineering specifications. The site keeps the description appropriately spare: the cables go in where the engineer's drawings say they go. Security Building Services and Supply makes no attempt to dress this up, and that restraint reads honestly. A builder working from stamped plans wants a crew that follows the drawings exactly, not one that improvises in the field.
Taken together, the three services point at a clear customer: a contractor pouring foundations in northeast Oklahoma who would rather coordinate one vendor than three. Security Building Services and Supply names its territory plainly. Tulsa, Owasso, Broken Arrow, Bixby, Jenks, Glenpool, and Coweta all appear explicitly, along with surrounding communities. That coverage fits a supplier capable of scaling from a single house footing up to a commercial slab.
One thing worth noting is how the three services reinforce each other operationally. A pretreat crew already on site for the termiticide application is far easier to coordinate with a rebar delivery and a post tension install than three unrelated vendors would be. Security Building Services and Supply appears to have built the business model around that timing alignment, and the 1969 starting date points to bundling that happened organically over time, not as a rebranding exercise.
Reputation and contact
Security Building Services and Supply lists a presence on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube, which gives a prospective client somewhere to look at completed work and recent activity before picking up the phone. A search for independent reviews turned up nothing tied to the Tulsa company. The names that surfaced belonged to entirely different firms in New Jersey, Illinois, and New York. There is no outside rating to draw on here, positive or negative, and it is worth stating that plainly: the credibility you build with Security Building Services and Supply comes from the work and the decades in operation, not from a public review trail.
Contact is functional but sparse. The phone number is on the homepage, which is the route most contractors will use anyway, since steel orders and pretreat scheduling are conversations, not web form submissions. There is no posted street address and no public email. A buyer who wants to visit the yard and inspect the rebar stock will need to call first to find out if that is even possible. For a materials supplier, the missing yard address is the more noticeable gap, since builders often want to know where the steel is physically staged. None of it disqualifies Security Building Services and Supply, but the first interaction is a phone call regardless of how a customer would prefer to start.
Comparing Security Building Services and Supply to a national franchise like Terminix sharpens what is on offer. Terminix brings a recognizable name, online booking, and a large public review history, but it does not cut footing steel or set post tension cables. A general contractor working with Terminix gets the pest-control slice only. Security Building Services and Supply offers something a national pest brand structurally cannot: rebar fabrication, termite pretreat, and post tension installation from one Oklahoma operation. The five-year termite warranty is a concrete commitment, and the family history in the trade is a real differentiator for a service that disappears under the slab. Whether that combination is the right fit depends on what a contractor values more: a thick online reputation or a single source with five decades of local ground work.
Business address
10323 E 50th Street,
Tusla,
OK
74146
United States
Contact details
Phone: +1-918-663-6272