Subgrade worked for the walk
We rework, moisture-condition, and compact the subgrade over Blackland clay so the walk keeps its grade rather than lifting and sagging in spots as the soil drinks water in and gives it back up.
Up and down Garland's older streets, sidewalks have buckled at the joints where the clay below worked the panels out of true. We pour paths that sit level and walk even, sloped to drain and textured to hold footing once the rain sets in.
Credibility comes from how it's built, not from promises. Here's the order of operations on every concrete sidewalks & walkways job.
We rework, moisture-condition, and compact the subgrade over Blackland clay so the walk keeps its grade rather than lifting and sagging in spots as the soil drinks water in and gives it back up.
A walkway pours on a 4-inch slab, plenty for the foot traffic a path takes day to day.
We place the control joints at a spacing that gives the slab planned seams to move along while the clay below it swells up and falls back across the seasons.
We dial the pitch so rain runs off the walk quickly instead of pooling and feeding a lopsided swell in the clay beneath, a problem that arrives faster on the damper lots near the lake.
A broom finish leaves grip underfoot the moment the path turns wet.
Most contractors vanish after the deposit. We pick up the phone, show up when we say, and stand behind the work after the truck leaves. The follow-through is the difference.
A foreman we know runs your job and a vetted crew does the work, managed by Lucky's, one company accountable from the first call to the final walkthrough.
COI and lien waivers on file before we break ground. The documentation that lets commercial clients pay and gives homeowners peace of mind.
Prepped subgrade, reinforced and mixed to spec for the job, and proper curing. We build credibility through the process, not promises. On concrete sidewalks & walkways, that starts with subgrade worked for the walk.

A walkway here draws its price from width, thickness, and the clay base work, plus the slip-aware finish, the slope, and demolition of any old buckled walk that needs to come out first. As a starting range, walkways generally open around $8 to $13 per square foot. We nail the figure down once we have paced off the run.
Often, yes. A single panel that moving clay or a tree root has shoved up can frequently be ground down or pulled and reset by itself, without redoing the full run. We trace what lifted it before we settle on the fix.
Expansive clay puffing up and tightening down with each wet and dry stretch jacks the panels out of line, and tree roots on the older lots pile onto it. On the repair we rebuild the base and redo the joint layout so the lift doesn't just come right back.
Yes. We pour ramps and approaches at the slope and surface accessibility calls for, finished with a slip-aware texture. Tell us how the ramp will be used and we build it to match.
We tie the joint spacing to the slab's width and thickness so the movement stays managed, because cutting joints short is precisely where runaway cracking begins, and our shrink-swell clay gives no quarter on it.
Hold off using the new walk for a few days while the slab sets up. We hand you the specific timeline for your pour ahead of time, with that week's heat factored in.
You'll hear back from a real person, usually the same day. No call center, no runaround, no chasing us down.
Booking up fast this season. Or call (469) 620-7077