Ragged yard edges and cracked sidewalks are not just eyesores - they are maintenance problems that get worse every season. We pour and finish concrete curbing and sidewalks built for Hurst clay soil, so what we install stays where it belongs.

Concrete curbing and sidewalk installation in Hurst, TX involves forming, pouring, and finishing fresh concrete along driveway edges, yard borders, or walkways, with most residential jobs completed in one to two days of active work.
If you are tired of re-edging your yard by hand every few weeks, watching mulch wash across your driveway after every storm, or tripping over a sidewalk section that has lifted or cracked, concrete is the fix that does not need to be redone. A properly installed slab with the right base prep and control joints can last several decades in this part of North Texas - even through the clay soil movement and summer heat that wear out lesser work quickly.
Concrete curbing pairs naturally with paving work. If you are replacing or upgrading your driveway, adding curbing at the same time protects the asphalt edges and holds the base material in place. We can talk about how driveway paving and concrete curbing work together as part of the same project.
If your flower beds spill out onto the lawn after a heavy storm and your driveway edge blurs into the yard, there is no defined border holding things in place. Hurst gets fast, heavy spring rains that move loose material quickly. Concrete curbing stops that migration permanently - no more re-edging every few weeks.
North Texas clay soil shifts enough over time that older sidewalks develop raised edges, sunken spots, or wide cracks. Beyond the eyesore, an uneven sidewalk is a trip hazard for family and visitors. If you are noticing these signs, replacing or extending the sidewalk now prevents the problem from getting worse.
A driveway that bleeds into the lawn without a defined edge looks unfinished and tends to deteriorate at the sides over time. The asphalt or concrete at the edge has nothing supporting it laterally, so it chips and crumbles under vehicle weight. Adding curbing gives the entire front of your property a cleaner look and protects the pavement edge.
First impressions matter in the mid-cities real estate market, and the walkway and driveway edge are among the first things a buyer sees. Fresh concrete curbing and a smooth sidewalk signal that the home has been well cared for - which can make a real difference in how quickly and favorably a property is received.
Whether you need a clean border around your driveway, a landscaping edge that stops mulch from migrating across the yard, or a new walkway from the street to your front door, we handle the full project - site prep, forming, pouring, finishing, and control joint placement. For homeowners who want something more than a plain gray border, we offer decorative and stamped curbing options that complement your home's exterior. And when concrete curbing is part of a larger paving job, we coordinate both phases so the finished surfaces meet cleanly at the right height. If your project involves asphalt milling before new pavement is laid, curbing installed at the right height ensures the finished surfaces align correctly and water drains as intended.
For homeowners concerned about drainage along the driveway or at the base of a new sidewalk, a concrete curb can redirect water away from your foundation. When drainage is a bigger issue across the yard or around the property, we can discuss how driveway paving and broader site grading work together with the curbing to solve the problem at the source. Every job comes with a written scope so you know exactly what is included before we start.
Right for homeowners who want a clean, defined edge along their driveway that holds the asphalt in place and keeps the surrounding lawn and mulch where they belong.
A decorative or functional concrete border around flower beds, mulch areas, or lawn edges - eliminates hand-edging and keeps landscaping looking intentional season after season.
New walkways from the driveway or street to your front door, or replacement of existing sidewalks that have cracked, heaved, or settled due to clay soil movement.
For homeowners who want more than a plain gray border - colored concrete, stamped patterns, or shaped profiles that complement your home's exterior and boost curb appeal.
The black clay soil under most Hurst neighborhoods - sometimes called "black gumbo" - is one of the most expansive in the country. It swells noticeably when it absorbs the heavy spring rains common in this part of Tarrant County, then shrinks and pulls back during the long, dry North Texas summers. That constant movement is the main reason concrete work in Hurst demands proper base compaction and control joint placement. A contractor who pours without accounting for clay movement is handing you a cracked slab before the second summer. Hurst's long, hot summers also require attention during the pour - concrete that dries too fast develops surface cracks that weaken the slab from the top down.
Many Hurst neighborhoods are part of established HOA communities that have guidelines covering hardscaping, curbing styles, and materials. We know to ask about those rules before recommending a finish or profile, so you are not stuck requesting a variance after the fact. We work regularly in Euless and Bedford and bring that same mid-cities familiarity to every Hurst project.
The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation oversees contractor licensing in the state. Verifying your contractor holds the appropriate credentials protects you from unlicensed work and ensures you have recourse if something goes wrong.
Call or message us to describe what you need - curbing, a new sidewalk, or both. We schedule a time to walk the property with you, take measurements, and talk through your finish and style options. You receive a written estimate covering the full scope. We reply to all inquiries within one business day.
Before any work begins, we determine whether a permit is required. If the sidewalk connects to or runs along a public right-of-way, the city may need to approve it first. We handle that paperwork and let you know how it affects your start date - you do not have to navigate city requirements on your own.
On the day work begins, we mark out the area, remove any existing concrete or edging, and prepare the base. In Hurst, this base preparation step is especially important because of the clay soil - the ground needs to be properly compacted so the concrete has a stable foundation beneath it.
We set up forms, pour and spread the concrete, work the surface to remove air pockets, smooth the finish, and cut control joints at correct intervals. In hot weather, we take extra steps to keep the surface from drying too fast. Once cured, we walk the finished work with you and handle any required inspection.
We walk your yard with you, explain your options, and give you a written quote with no pressure. We reply within one business day.
(682) 628-2440We cut control joints into every concrete slab we pour - no exceptions. Those joints give the concrete a planned place to flex as Hurst's clay soil moves beneath it. Skipping them is the single fastest way to end up with random cracks across a new surface within the first year.
The black clay soil under most Hurst homes swells when it absorbs rain and shrinks when it dries out. We compact the base and address drainage before forming begins, so the concrete sits on stable ground rather than shifting soil. That preparation is what separates a slab that lasts decades from one that cracks in a few seasons.
Sidewalks near the street may fall under city jurisdiction, and a contractor who does not know that can leave you with an unpermitted slab that fails inspection. We know when a Hurst permit is required and handle the process for you, so the work is done right and the paperwork is clean.
You get a written estimate that covers every step before any concrete is poured. The American Concrete Institute sets the industry standards our work follows - and we are glad to explain what those mean for your specific project.
Concrete work is permanent - you want it done right the first time. Every job we take on in Hurst is built with the base prep, joint placement, and drainage grading that give the finished surface the best chance of lasting for decades in this part of North Texas.
When your existing driveway pavement needs to come off before a fresh layer goes down, milling removes the damaged surface at the correct depth so curbing heights and drainage grades align with the new pour.
Learn MoreA new asphalt driveway and fresh concrete curbing are a natural pairing - the curb protects the asphalt edge and keeps the base material in place for the long term.
Learn MoreSpring and fall book up quickly in the HEB area - reach out now to lock in your project before the best windows fill up.