Sherman Concrete Company serves Plano, TX homeowners with garage floor concrete, driveways, patios, and slab foundations built for the city's clay soil conditions. Most Plano homes are now 25 to 50 years old and overdue for a real concrete assessment - we have been serving the North Texas area since 2023 and respond within one business day.

Most Plano homes were built with attached two-car garages, and the original garage slabs in 1970s and 1980s homes are now 40 to 50 years old - showing cracks, staining, and in some cases noticeable settling from Plano's clay soil. A new garage floor pour gives you a clean, level surface that is far easier to keep clean and structurally sound. Learn more about our garage floor concrete service.
Plano's large suburban lots typically feature long concrete driveways, and those that were poured in the 1970s through 1990s are reaching the end of their service life. Plano's clay soil has been working on those slabs from below every wet and dry season, and the cracking and heaving that results is not something patching can fix long-term.
Plano homeowners use their backyard spaces heavily through the long Texas spring and fall, and many are upgrading aging wood decks or brick patios to concrete. A concrete patio on a well-prepared base handles the clay soil movement better than pavers and does not require restaining, re-leveling, or board replacement over the years.
In the higher-value neighborhoods around Legacy West and along the Preston Road corridor, homeowners are choosing stamped concrete for driveways, pool surrounds, and patios to get the look of stone or brick without the maintenance. Stamped concrete holds its pattern and color better in the Texas heat than many alternative materials.
Plano's long hot summers drive strong demand for pools, and an existing pool deck that has cracked, shifted, or developed uneven joints is both a safety issue and a water management problem. A properly finished concrete pool deck with the right surface texture handles heat, foot traffic, and pool chemicals without constant repairs.
New additions and outbuildings on Plano properties require slab foundations designed to handle the local clay soil. Pouring a slab on uncompacted fill or without adequate thickness in this soil environment leads to settling within a few years - getting the foundation right at the start saves a lot of money on corrections later.
The majority of Plano's residential neighborhoods were built during a 30-year suburban boom that ran from the 1970s through the early 2000s. That timing matters for concrete. Homes in this age range are now 25 to 50 years old, and the concrete that was poured with them - driveways, garage floors, patios, sidewalks - is approaching or past the point where repairs no longer make sense. Plano's expansive clay soil has been working on those slabs through every wet and dry cycle for decades, and the movement shows in heaved sections, full-depth cracks, and drainage that no longer flows the right direction.
Plano also runs hot. Temperatures routinely hit 100 degrees or above from June through August, and that extreme heat degrades caulk and sealants faster than in cooler climates, accelerates surface wear on older concrete, and puts real stress on any fresh pour that is not properly managed during the cure. Spring hail storms - a consistent reality for the Dallas-Plano area - crack older driveways and damage exposed concrete surfaces. The Texas A&M AgriLife Extension guidance on expansive soil foundations covers the science behind why Plano's soil conditions create these ongoing concrete challenges.
Our crew works throughout Plano regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete contractor work here. The city's neighborhoods span a wide range of home ages and property types. Older homes near Historic Downtown Plano typically have smaller lots, brick veneer construction, and original concrete that is 40 to 60 years old - work that requires careful demolition and site prep before a new pour. Homes in west Plano and the areas near the Legacy West development tend to be newer, larger, and on bigger lots with longer driveways - projects that involve more square footage but fewer surprises in the ground.
Plano is a large city in Collin County, north of Dallas, known for its well-regarded school district and a strong base of corporate employers including Toyota's North American headquarters. Many residents are long-term homeowners who take property maintenance seriously - which is exactly the kind of homeowner we do our best work for. We also serve customers in Garland, TX and Allen, TX and other communities throughout the Collin County area.
Call us directly or use the estimate form on this page. We respond to every Plano inquiry within one business day - no waiting weeks for a callback that never comes.
We visit your Plano property, measure the project area, check site drainage and the condition of any existing concrete, and give you a written estimate. We will tell you honestly whether repair or replacement is the better move for your situation - and we explain why.
We handle all demolition of old concrete, sub-base compaction, forming, and the pour itself. You do not need to be on-site for every step, but we keep you informed when the pour day is scheduled and what the cure timeline looks like.
Once the concrete has cured and the site is cleaned up, we walk you through the finished work and answer any questions. We leave you with straightforward care instructions so the surface lasts.
We work throughout Plano and respond to every inquiry within one business day. Tell us about your project and we will come take a look at no charge.
Plano is one of the largest cities in Texas, with roughly 290,000 residents and a high concentration of owner-occupied homes. The city is known for its well-funded school district, its large corporate employer base - Toyota, JPMorgan Chase, and Liberty Mutual all have significant operations here - and neighborhoods that run the gamut from the older brick homes near Historic Downtown Plano to the upscale newer development around the Legacy West mixed-use district in the far north of the city. That variety in building age and property type means concrete needs vary widely from one part of Plano to another.
The bulk of the city's residential areas were built between the 1970s and early 2000s - a 30-year building boom that filled in large master-planned neighborhoods with brick veneer homes on standard suburban lots. Those homes are now old enough that original driveways, garage floors, and patios are overdue for attention. Parks like Arbor Hills Nature Preserve in west Plano draw homeowners who care about the quality of their neighborhood - and those are typically the same homeowners who invest in keeping their property in good shape. Nearby communities including McKinney, TX to the north are also within our service area.
Get a durable, professionally poured concrete driveway built to last.
Learn MoreTransform your outdoor space with a smooth, long-lasting concrete patio.
Learn MoreSafe, level concrete sidewalks installed for homes and businesses.
Learn MoreSolid concrete retaining walls that control erosion and shape terrain.
Learn MorePrecision concrete floor installation for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreSlip-resistant, attractive concrete pool decks installed around any pool.
Learn MoreReliable concrete slab foundations poured for new construction projects.
Learn MoreExpert foundation installation designed to support structures for decades.
Learn MoreHeavy-duty concrete parking lots built for commercial and industrial use.
Learn MoreCall us or submit the estimate form and we will get back to you within one business day. Free on-site estimates for all Plano projects, no obligation.