
Cracked, uneven, or missing a floor entirely? We pour concrete garage slabs, basement floors, and new-build pads in Bryant - starting with the right base prep so Bryant's clay soil does not undo the work five years from now.

Concrete floor installation in Bryant, AR covers everything from removing an old failing slab through pouring and finishing a new one - most residential pours take one to two days of active work, followed by a curing period before the space is fully ready to use. The work that happens before the concrete arrives matters most: compacting the ground and adding a gravel base protects the slab from Bryant's expansive clay soil, which shifts with every wet and dry season and is the primary reason older slabs crack and settle in this area.
We install concrete floors for garages, basements, workshops, and new construction slabs throughout Bryant and Saline County. If your project is part of a larger outdoor space - like adding a garage floor alongside other exterior work - we can often coordinate everything in a single project so the site only gets disrupted once.
Small hairline cracks are common in older concrete, but cracks wide enough to slip a coin into - or ones where one side sits higher than the other - mean the slab is failing. In Bryant, the clay soil underneath can shift enough over the years to pull sections apart. Diagonal cracks or height differences between sections usually mean replacement is the right call, not another patch.
If water pours onto your garage or basement floor and it collects in one spot rather than draining, the slab has settled unevenly. This is common in Bryant homes built before the 1990s, where base preparation standards were less rigorous. Uneven floors also become a tripping hazard and allow moisture to work toward your foundation over time.
If the top layer is peeling off in chips or the surface feels rough and sandy when you sweep, the concrete is deteriorating. This happens when the original mix was too wet, when the surface was finished too early, or when moisture has repeatedly worked through the slab. Even Bryant's mild winter freezes can accelerate this process in an already-weakened slab.
If you are finishing a basement, adding a workshop, or building out a new structure, a concrete floor is typically the first step. A properly poured slab gives you a stable, moisture-resistant base for whatever flooring or activity goes on top - and pouring it at the start of a project is far easier than trying to add it after framing is already in place.
Every floor installation starts the same way: we assess the existing conditions, discuss how you plan to use the space, and determine the right thickness and finish for your specific situation. From there we handle the full sequence - removing old concrete if needed, grading and compacting the ground, laying a gravel sub-base, then pouring and finishing the slab. Control joints are cut or pressed into the surface at regular intervals to give the concrete a controlled place to move as it dries and as the ground shifts seasonally - this is standard practice, not optional. We also handle concrete pool decks and other flatwork if your project extends beyond the interior space.
Finish options matter more than most homeowners expect. A broom finish adds grip - the right call for garages and utility spaces. A smoother trowel finish suits workshops or spaces you plan to keep clean and organized. We also apply concrete sealers after curing on request, which extends the life of the slab and makes cleanup easier. All required City of Bryant permits are pulled before work begins and inspection is scheduled on your behalf.
Textured surface for grip - the standard choice for garages, workshops, and any space that sees vehicles or foot traffic.
A cleaner, flatter surface that works well for interior spaces where appearance matters and the area stays relatively dry.
A protective coating applied after the concrete cures - resists staining, oil, and moisture, and extends the life of the floor.
Bryant sits on expansive clay soil that swells with moisture and shrinks when dry - that cycle is the primary reason so many slabs in older Bryant homes crack and settle over time. Proper base preparation is not just a best practice here, it is the main thing that separates a slab that lasts 40 years from one that needs attention in five. Bryant's summer heat adds another layer of complexity: when daytime temperatures climb past 90 degrees, concrete can dry too quickly at the surface while the inside is still wet, which creates a weak layer that cracks under load. Our crews schedule summer pours in the early morning and monitor curing carefully to avoid that problem. The Portland Cement Association and the American Concrete Institute both publish guidance on hot-weather concrete practices that inform how we approach summer work in this climate.
We serve Bryant and the broader region, including homeowners in Benton and Little Rock. Bryant has been one of the fastest-growing cities in Arkansas, which means we see a mix of older homes with worn-out slabs and newer builds that need new floors poured from scratch - and we handle both every week.
Reach out by phone or the contact form and we respond within 1 business day. We schedule a free visit to measure the space, look at the existing conditions, and talk through your finish preferences. You receive a written estimate that breaks down prep, materials, and finishing - no vague bottom-line number.
We handle the City of Bryant building permit and schedule the pour around the weather forecast. Summer heat and cold snaps both affect concrete quality, so timing matters. You get a confirmed start date once the permit is in hand and conditions are right.
Before pour day you will need to clear the space completely - vehicles, tools, stored items. The crew then grades and compacts the soil and lays the gravel base. This preparation phase usually takes half a day to a full day and is the most important part of the entire job.
The concrete truck arrives and the crew places, levels, and finishes the surface before it sets. After curing - at least 24 to 48 hours before foot traffic, a week before vehicles - we do a final walk-through with you. If a city inspection was scheduled, that happens before you make your final payment.
We respond within 1 business day. Free on-site estimate, written quote, no obligation.
(501) 984-8019We compact the ground and lay a proper gravel sub-base before any concrete is poured - every time, without exception. In Bryant's clay soil, this step is the difference between a floor that lasts 40 years and one that starts cracking and settling within a few seasons.
We pull all required City of Bryant building permits before work begins and schedule city inspections on your behalf. Permitted work is documented in public records, which protects your home's value and removes potential red flags when you sell.
We watch the forecast and schedule your pour for conditions that give the concrete the best chance to cure correctly. Pouring in extreme heat or before a cold snap is a shortcut that shows up as cracks later - and we do not take that shortcut.
We are licensed through the Arkansas Contractors Licensing Board. You can verify that license before signing anything - and a reputable contractor will not hesitate when you ask for that information. Liability coverage is also in place on every project.
The most common complaint homeowners have after a concrete job is that something went wrong years later - and almost always it traces back to prep work or curing that was rushed. We take the time to do those steps correctly because it costs us nothing extra and saves you a call back in three years.
Add a durable, slip-resistant concrete deck around your pool that holds up through Arkansas summers.
Learn MoreResurface or replace a worn garage floor with a clean, level slab built for vehicle traffic and daily use.
Learn MoreSpring and early fall pour windows fill up fast in Bryant - reach out now and we will lock in your project before the best dates are gone.