Concrete Sealing and Moisture Protection.
Sealers can help reduce water and salt intrusion, but they are not a substitute for drainage correction or structural repair. We match protection to the concrete condition and exposure.

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.
- Surface condition and whether the concrete is sound enough to protect
- Water source: surface runoff, snowmelt, vapor, or hydrostatic pressure
- Salt exposure, traffic, and freeze-thaw cycles
- Previous sealers, coatings, moisture, and surface prep
- Whether sealing, joint work, drainage correction, or repair must happen first
Vermont note
Sealing helps when it reduces water entry into a sound surface. It does not stop a drainage problem from underneath.
How we handle the work.
We start with the condition, access, use, and Vermont exposure so the scope matches the actual concrete problem.
Exposure review
We identify water sources, snowmelt, drainage, vapor, salt, cracks, joints, and porous surface areas.
Material fit
Sealers and waterproofing products are matched to the concrete condition and moisture behavior.
Prep requirements
Cleaning, crack work, joint work, surface profile, and drying conditions are addressed before application.
Limitations
Sealants help reduce intrusion, but they do not replace drainage correction or structural repair.
Maintenance plan
We explain recoat timing, seasonal inspection, and how to keep water from controlling the repair.
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.