Expansion Joint and Control Joint Repair.
Joints are there to manage movement and water. We clean, rebuild, route, seal, or recreate joint function depending on slab movement, exposure, and repair goal.

Planned for Vermont conditions: snowmelt, salt, drainage, access, freeze-thaw cycles, and long-term use.
What we confirm before repair is priced
Repair pricing depends on cause, access, and whether the concrete is still a good candidate for repair.
- Joint width, depth, spacing, and whether it still functions
- Backer rod, sealant condition, debris, and water entry
- Traffic, snow removal, salt, and edge breakdown
- Whether saw cuts or joint recreation are needed after resurfacing or replacement
- Movement expectations and seasonal timing
Vermont note
Open joints collect water. In winter that water becomes pressure, edge damage, and repeated cracking.
How we handle the work.
We start with the condition, access, use, and Vermont exposure so the scope matches the actual concrete problem.
Joint condition
We review failed sealant, open joints, debris, water paths, slab movement, and edge breakdown.
Movement function
Joints are checked for their actual job: controlling movement, water entry, and slab stress.
Preparation
Old material, dust, moisture, and weak edges are removed before backer rod or sealant is installed.
Sealant selection
Joint size, movement, exposure, and traffic determine the correct sealant approach.
Water control
Joint repair is tied back to drainage, snowmelt, salt exposure, and freeze-thaw protection.
One local intake for repair, resurfacing, and new concrete.
You do not need to know the exact service name. Send the photos, explain the goal, and we will route the next step.
Send photos. We’ll route the right concrete path.
Text 3–5 photos to 802-809-1213 or use the form. Include the town, access, timing, and what outcome you want: repair, resurface, replace, pour, stabilize, or assess.