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Concrete systems / Repair + restoration

Repair the element—and the condition acting on it.

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.

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Completed High Rise construction and foundation work area after concrete repair and restoration

Above grade / below grade

What the site may be showing

Cracking is one part of the condition record.

Pattern, width, displacement, moisture, corrosion, load, and change over time help determine whether repair is cosmetic, serviceability-related, or structural.

01

Displaced cracks

Cracks with vertical or horizontal offset can affect alignment, drainage, safe use, and how loads move through the element.

02

Spalling + exposure

Delaminated or missing concrete and visible reinforcement require review of moisture, corrosion, cover, and remaining section.

03

Joint failure

Movement joints, construction joints, penetrations, and transitions often concentrate water or distress.

04

Support loss

Voids, erosion, settlement, or changing bearing can damage otherwise sound concrete or prevent a surface repair from lasting.

Evaluation to execution

A durable repair begins at the interface.

Preparation, reinforcement, bond, geometry, moisture, curing, loading, and movement accommodation all affect the completed repair.

  1. 01

    Classify the distress

    Document cracking, displacement, delamination, reinforcement, moisture, load, movement, and surrounding support.

  2. 02

    Define the repair zone

    Establish removal limits, access, temporary protection, edge geometry, reinforcement work, and scope boundaries.

  3. 03

    Prepare + place

    Remove unsuitable material, prepare interfaces, complete specified reinforcement or support work, and place the repair material.

  4. 04

    Cure + protect

    Manage cure, loading, drainage, joints, protection, and restoration before returning the element to intended use.

Residential applications

Plan around the occupied home.

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

Coordinate the structure and the operation.

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

The method has to fit the condition.

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

Questions to resolve before the work starts.

Property-specific next step

Document the condition. Define the repair path.

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