Decorative concrete
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Bryan's clay soil cracks garage floors that were not built for it. We pour floors with proper base prep, correct thickness, and control joints - so you get a surface that holds up for decades, not years.

Garage floor concrete in Bryan means more than just a pour - most jobs involve demolishing the old slab, compacting the clay soil base, and finishing with control joints that prevent random cracking. A standard two-car garage floor typically takes one pour day plus seven days of curing before vehicles can return.
Bryan's expansive clay soil is the number one reason garage floors here fail early. The ground swells in wet springs and shrinks in dry summers - and a floor poured on unstabilized soil moves with it. If you have also been thinking about concrete floor installation for other areas of your property, the same soil conditions apply there too.
A quality pour starts before any concrete is mixed. The base prep - compaction, grading, and sometimes a gravel drainage layer - is what separates a floor that lasts 30 years from one you are patching again in five.
If you have patched cracks before and they reopen - or new ones appear nearby - the clay soil underneath is moving. Patching stops the visible symptom but not the cause. At some point, replacement is the more honest answer.
Water pooling on your garage floor means the surface is no longer level. The slab has settled unevenly, or it was never poured with proper drainage slope. Standing water works its way into any crack and makes the soil problem underneath worse.
Tap your heel firmly across different spots. If some areas sound hollow, the concrete may have separated from the soil beneath - a condition called undermining. A floor in this condition is at real risk of cracking through under a vehicle's weight.
If the top layer is breaking into chips or the surface looks rough and pitted, the concrete has begun to deteriorate from the surface down. Bryan's heat-humidity cycles accelerate this kind of wear. Once the surface starts going, it tends to get worse quickly.
We handle every part of the job - from pulling the permit through Bryan's Development Services office to demolishing your old slab and hauling it away, grading and compacting the base, pouring the new floor, and cutting control joints before the surface fully hardens. The surface finish options range from a standard broom finish (textured for traction) to a smoother finish if you prefer a cleaner look.
For homeowners whose concrete needs go beyond the garage, we also offer decorative concrete finishes for patios and driveways, and full concrete floor installation for commercial and interior spaces. The prep standards are the same across all of them - proper base work first.
Best for homeowners replacing a cracked or aging slab - includes demolition, base prep, pour, and control joints.
For new builds or additions where no existing slab is present - starts from graded ground up.
Broom finish adds traction for everyday garage use; smooth finish suits homeowners who want a cleaner aesthetic.
Bryan sits on some of the most challenging soil in Central Texas. The Brazos Valley's heavy clay expands with every spring rain and contracts through the dry summer months. That cycle puts constant stress on concrete from below, and it is the main reason garage floors in established Bryan neighborhoods crack and shift more than homeowners expect. A floor poured without accounting for that movement is going to need attention again in a few years.
The city's growth - driven in part by Texas A&M University next door in College Station - keeps contractors busy, especially from March through May and again in the fall. If your project is time-sensitive, getting on a schedule early matters. We serve the full Bryan metro including homeowners in College Station and Conroe, where many of the same soil and climate conditions apply.
We ask a few basic questions about your garage size and whether there is an existing slab. We respond within 1 business day and schedule a site visit before giving you a firm, written price - no guessing on cost.
We pull the building permit through Bryan's Development Services office before any work begins. You clear the garage; we handle demolition, soil compaction, and forming the edges of the new slab.
The concrete truck arrives and the crew pours, spreads, and finishes the floor in one session - typically starting early morning in warm months. Control joints are cut before the slab fully hardens.
You can walk on the floor within 24 to 48 hours. Vehicles stay off for about seven days. The city inspector checks the work before we consider the job done - your floor is on record as legal, inspected work.
We respond within 1 business day. There is no obligation to hire after receiving your estimate. After you submit, someone from our office will call you to schedule a free on-site visit so we can give you an accurate written price.
(979) 359-2229Bryan's expansive soil cracks floors that were poured on a rushed or shallow base. We compact thoroughly and add gravel drainage when the site calls for it - steps that add time but add decades to the floor's life. .
We pull the Bryan Development Services permit before any demolition begins. Your floor gets inspected and signed off - which protects you at resale and means the work is on record. See the city's requirements at the City of Bryan Development Services.
Pouring concrete at noon in July produces a weaker, rougher surface. We schedule warm-weather pours for early morning and manage curing so the floor hardens correctly - not just fast. .
We are a local crew that works in Bryan and the surrounding Brazos Valley every week. We know which neighborhoods have the worst clay, where water tends to pool, and what the city inspector looks for. .
Every one of these points connects back to the same thing: a garage floor that holds up in Bryan's specific conditions. The soil, the heat, and the permit process here are different from other markets, and experience with all three shows up in the quality of the finished floor.
Add stamped patterns, stain colors, or polished finishes to new or existing concrete surfaces around your home.
Learn moreInterior and commercial concrete floor pours with the same base prep standards we apply to every residential garage floor.
Learn moreBryan's clay soil does not get easier to manage over time - the sooner you replace a failing floor, the less damage the shifting ground can do to surrounding structures.