Most of the concrete calls we get from property managers aren't about new construction — they're about a cracked slab a tenant tripped on, a pothole that's turning into a liability claim, or a parking lot striping job that's been pushed back two budget cycles too many. We run ongoing concrete and site maintenance for commercial and industrial properties around Greenville and Hunt County, focused on the repairs that actually matter for risk and tenant retention: trip-hazard grinding, slab crack repair, ADA compliance fixes, and parking lot upkeep.
Trip-hazard grinding is usually the first call. A lifted slab joint or a settled panel at a storefront entrance is a slip-and-fall claim waiting to happen, and it's a same-visit fix in most cases — we grind the offset down to a safe transition instead of replacing the whole panel. ADA work follows the same logic: curb ramps that have worn out of tolerance, van-accessible spaces that lost their striping, detectable warning strips that never got installed correctly the first time. These are the items that show up on an accessibility audit and the ones that are cheapest to fix before someone files a complaint, not after.
Parking lots take the most abuse and get the least attention until they're a real problem. We run scheduled programs for property managers covering pothole patching, joint resealing, crack filling before water gets into the base, and periodic restriping so ADA spaces, fire lanes, and drive aisles stay legible. For multi-tenant retail and industrial parks in Hunt County, a maintenance program beats a reactive repair call every time — smaller, cheaper fixes done on a schedule instead of a bigger reconstruction bill after the base has failed.
We work directly with property management companies and facility directors, in addition to developers and general contractors. That means responding to a work order on a timeline that fits a management portfolio, documenting repairs for your records, and pricing maintenance work differently than a new-construction bid — because a parking lot patch and a tilt-wall foundation aren't the same job.




