Mainstay Hurst Asphalt Paving handles commercial asphalt paving, driveway installation, sealcoating, and parking lot repair across Fort Worth, TX - with a crew that understands the clay-soil conditions and wide range of property types that define this city, and a response time of one business day.

Fort Worth has miles of commercial corridors - along I-35W, I-30, Camp Bowie Boulevard, and East Lancaster - where parking lots and loading areas take constant traffic. We pave and maintain commercial asphalt surfaces that hold up under daily load and the city's clay-soil movement. Learn more about our commercial asphalt paving services.
Fort Worth's older inner-city neighborhoods and post-war suburbs contain driveways that were installed in the 1950s through 1980s and are now well past their service life. A new asphalt driveway on a properly prepared base handles clay-soil movement better than a concrete replacement at a lower installed cost.
Fort Worth summers regularly push past 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and that heat breaks down asphalt binder faster than in cooler regions. Regular sealcoating every two to three years blocks UV damage and prevents surface oxidation that leads to cracking and crumbling edges.
Potholes in Fort Worth typically start as small cracks that allow water into the base - and once the clay subbase gets wet, it moves, and the surface above fails. Prompt pothole filling stops the deterioration cycle before a small repair becomes a large replacement.
The shrink-swell cycle of Tarrant County clay creates cracks in Fort Worth parking lots and driveways every season. Sealing those cracks before water can penetrate and reach the base is the most cost-effective maintenance step a property owner can take.
Commercial properties across Fort Worth - from retail centers to industrial facilities near the Alliance area - need parking lots that are well-marked and ADA-compliant. We handle striping, patching, and preventive maintenance to keep lots functional and in good repair.
Fort Worth is one of the largest and fastest-growing cities in Texas, and its housing stock spans more than a century. Older neighborhoods near downtown - places like Fairmount and Polytechnic Heights - have homes and driveways that date back to the early 1900s. Mid-century suburbs on the southwest side and north side contain ranch-style homes built in the 1950s through 1980s, with driveways now 40 to 70 years old. Newer subdivisions near the Alliance corridor and along the Chisholm Trail Parkway represent a third wave of development. Each era brings different pavement conditions and different needs, and a contractor who works regularly in Fort Worth knows those differences.
The soil under Fort Worth is heavy black clay - sometimes called black gumbo - that expands when wet and shrinks when dry. This annual cycle puts stress on asphalt from below, loosening the base and working cracks open over time. Fort Worth summers also push past 100 degrees Fahrenheit regularly, which bakes the surface binder and accelerates oxidation. A contractor who does not account for both the soil movement and the heat load in their base preparation and material choices will produce pavement that fails long before it should.
Our crew works throughout Fort Worth regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect asphalt paving work here. Commercial paving projects in the city typically require coordination with Fort Worth Development Services for permits when the scope touches public right-of-way or changes impervious cover on the site. Fort Worth is a large city with very different property types depending on where you are - the dense older neighborhoods east of downtown, the mid-century suburbs in areas like Wedgwood and Ridglea, and the newer master-planned communities in the far north near Alliance all present different site conditions and access considerations.
Major arteries like I-35W, Loop 820, the Chisholm Trail Parkway, and Camp Bowie Boulevard shape how Fort Worth is laid out, and many of the commercial corridors along those routes have large parking lots with aging asphalt that needs regular attention. We also serve neighboring Arlington, TX to the east and Keller, TX to the north, so customers near Fort Worth city limits on either side can reach us easily.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form. We respond within one business day and can schedule a Fort Worth property visit promptly. Estimates for residential and commercial projects are free.
We visit the property, assess the existing surface, measure the area, and evaluate base and drainage conditions. You receive a written, itemized estimate with a clear scope - no vague line items, no hidden costs. This step is where we address your cost questions directly.
The crew handles all grading, compaction, and drainage work before asphalt is laid. On Fort Worth's expansive clay soil, this prep phase determines whether the finished surface lasts or fails prematurely. We do not skip it.
Before leaving, we walk the finished surface with you and explain the cure timeline. Most surfaces in Fort Worth summer conditions are ready for light traffic within 24 to 48 hours, with full cure completed within a few days.
Contact us and we will respond within one business day. Free estimates for Fort Worth, TX residential and commercial properties.
(682) 628-2440Fort Worth is the county seat of Tarrant County and the western anchor of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex - one of the four largest metro areas in the United States. The city has a distinct identity shaped by its Western heritage, anchored by the Fort Worth Stockyards in the north and the world-class museums of the Cultural District to the west. Sundance Square in downtown serves as the city's commercial and entertainment core. With well over one million residents, Fort Worth is one of the largest cities in Texas and has been among the fastest-growing in the country for much of the past two decades.
The city's housing stock ranges from century-old craftsman bungalows in neighborhoods like Fairmount to new subdivisions near the Alliance inland port in the far north. Established neighborhoods in areas like Ridglea, Wedgwood, and TCU-adjacent Westover Hills sit alongside newer growth along the Chisholm Trail corridor to the south. This variety means Fort Worth homeowners and commercial property owners face different paving challenges depending on their location in the city. The Mid-Cities area that includes our home base of Hurst and neighboring North Richland Hills borders Fort Worth to the northeast, giving us natural access across the eastern portions of the city.
Professional parking lot paving for commercial and industrial properties.
Learn MoreQuality concrete curbs and sidewalks that complement your asphalt.
Learn MoreWe serve all of Fort Worth - from the historic neighborhoods near downtown to the fast-growing areas on the city's edges. Call us or send a message and we will get back to you within one business day.