Displaced cracks
Cracks with vertical or horizontal offset can affect alignment, drainage, safe use, and how loads move through the element.
Concrete systems / Repair + restoration
Concrete distress can involve movement, reinforcement, water, impact, installation, loading, or material deterioration. A responsible scope separates cosmetic surface work from repair tied to support or safe use.
Request a site evaluation
Above grade / below grade
What the site may be showing
Pattern, width, displacement, moisture, corrosion, load, and change over time help determine whether repair is cosmetic, serviceability-related, or structural.
Cracks with vertical or horizontal offset can affect alignment, drainage, safe use, and how loads move through the element.
Delaminated or missing concrete and visible reinforcement require review of moisture, corrosion, cover, and remaining section.
Movement joints, construction joints, penetrations, and transitions often concentrate water or distress.
Voids, erosion, settlement, or changing bearing can damage otherwise sound concrete or prevent a surface repair from lasting.
Evaluation to execution
Preparation, reinforcement, bond, geometry, moisture, curing, loading, and movement accommodation all affect the completed repair.
Document cracking, displacement, delamination, reinforcement, moisture, load, movement, and surrounding support.
Establish removal limits, access, temporary protection, edge geometry, reinforcement work, and scope boundaries.
Remove unsuitable material, prepare interfaces, complete specified reinforcement or support work, and place the repair material.
Manage cure, loading, drainage, joints, protection, and restoration before returning the element to intended use.
Residential applications
Localized foundation, footing, grade-beam, porch, step, and slab conditions
Protection planning around occupants, finishes, landscaping, and access
Coordination with piering, drainage, foam leveling, masonry, and finish repair
Commercial applications
Selected walls, slabs, grade beams, footings, approaches, and service areas
Work-zone, occupant, delivery, dust, noise, and cure-time planning
Coordination with engineers, facility teams, inspectors, and adjacent trades
Scope boundaries
Evaluation may identify monitoring, engineering input, water-management work, another repair system, or work by an additional trade before the proposed scope proceeds.
Whether the element is structural, load-bearing, or safety-critical
Active movement, support loss, water, or corrosion
Reinforcement condition and required development
Repair-material compatibility and interface preparation
Cure, temperature, access, and return-to-service limits
Need for testing, engineering, permits, or specialty restoration
Service FAQ
Property-specific next step