Surface · Vermont Concrete Repair

Concrete Resurfacing That Starts with Bond and Moisture.

Resurfacing only works when the existing concrete can support a bonded surface. We evaluate soundness, moisture, surface profile, drainage, and previous coating failure before recommending an overlay.

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Concrete resurfacing and surface preparation visual in Vermont

Planned for Vermont conditions: snowmelt, salt, drainage, access, freeze-thaw cycles, and long-term use.

Scope logic

What we confirm before repair is priced

Repair pricing depends on cause, access, and whether the concrete is still a good candidate for repair.

  • Sound substrate versus hollow, scaling, or contaminated concrete
  • Moisture vapor, drainage, and freeze-thaw exposure
  • Required surface profile and removal of weak material
  • Edge terminations, joints, cracks, and movement
  • Whether resurfacing is realistic or replacement is the better investment

Vermont note

In New England, overlays usually fail at the interface. Surface prep, moisture, and drainage matter more than how good the finish looks on day one.

Moisturesnowmelt, vapor, drainage, salt, saturation
Movementfrost heave, settlement, thermal change, cracks
Loadvehicles, steps, entries, traffic, edge stress
Prepbase, forms, surface profile, bond, curing
Process

How we handle the work.

We start with the condition, access, use, and Vermont exposure so the scope matches the actual concrete problem.

01

Substrate review

We confirm whether the existing concrete is sound, stable, clean, and strong enough to carry a bonded surface.

02

Moisture check

Vapor, saturation, drainage, salt, and spring moisture are reviewed before any overlay is recommended.

03

Surface preparation

Grinding, cleaning, profile, edge prep, and bond requirements are planned before material selection.

04

Overlay fit

Thin resurfacing, patching, coating, or replacement is selected based on substrate and use.

05

Expectation setting

We define what resurfacing can improve and what it cannot fix if the slab is moving or failing below.

Vermonters’ home for all things concrete

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.

Start here

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.

Submitting starts intake only. It does not authorize work or guarantee schedule availability.

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