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Sidewalk and Apron Patching After Utility Work Done Right

Sidewalk and Apron Patching After Utility Work Done Right image
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When utility crews dig up a neighborhood street, the concrete they tear through doesn't always get put back the right way. Sometimes it gets a temporary patch that cracks within a season. Sometimes it just gets left rough. Either way, the people walking and driving over it every day are the ones dealing with the aftermath.

That's where we come in. After underground work wraps up, we handle the concrete restoration - sidewalks, aprons, walkways, all of it. The process starts with proper excavation and base prep. You don't just pour concrete on top of disturbed ground and call it a day. We set the forms correctly, compact the base material, and make sure everything is graded right before a single yard of concrete gets placed.

The finished sidewalk runs clean and consistent - smooth texture, properly spaced control joints, and tight edges all the way through. The apron at the street tie-in matches the surrounding grade so there's no lip or bump where the new concrete meets the old. That stuff matters. A bad transition at the curb line is a trip hazard waiting to happen, and it's also the first place a sloppy patch starts to fail.

We do this kind of work because neighborhoods deserve better than a half-done repair job after the utility crews move on. Residents shouldn't have to dodge cracked slabs or uneven concrete just because a water line or gas main needed attention. When we leave a job site, the sidewalks and aprons are safe, solid, and built to last - not just presentable for a week.