








This was a big one. Fifty yards of concrete across two days - a wide pad, a long curved driveway, and a full sidewalk running the length of the building. Jobs like this don't just happen. They take solid planning before the first truck rolls, a crew that communicates well, and a clear picture of how all the pieces connect.
Before we ever poured, we had the forms set, rebar laid in a tight grid, and the layout locked in. That prep work is what keeps everything straight and square once the concrete starts flowing. You can see how the rebar is spaced evenly across the entire area - that's not something you rush. It's what separates a slab that holds up for decades from one that starts cracking in a few years.
Once the pour was done, we let it cure and came back to saw cut the control joints. This step matters more than most people realize. Concrete moves - it expands, contracts, and settles. Control joints give it a place to do that without cracking randomly across the surface. Getting the spacing right and cutting clean, straight lines is part of doing the job correctly.
After the cuts were made, we cleaned everything up. The finish on a slab this size needs to be consistent from edge to edge, and the saw cut lines need to be clear and uniform. We don't consider a job done until it looks as good cleaned up as it does freshly poured.
We're grateful for every customer who hands us a job like this and trusts us to get it right. Big pours require the whole crew working together from start to finish, and this one came together exactly the way it should. That's what we show up to do every day.