Advanced Coppell Concrete works throughout Addison, TX with decorative concrete, driveway replacement, commercial parking lot pours, and patio construction. Addison is one of the most commercially dense towns in the Dallas area, and its residential and commercial properties - mostly built between the 1970s and 1990s - sit on the same expansive Dallas County clay that causes concrete issues across the entire Metroplex. We have been serving this part of North Dallas since 2020 and respond to every inquiry within 1 business day.

Addison property owners - whether on a townhome lot, a commercial strip along Belt Line Road, or a mid-rise office complex - frequently want concrete surfaces that do more than just function. Stamped patterns, exposed aggregate, integral color, and broom-finish combinations can turn a plain slab into a surface that fits the property. Learn more about the finishes and design options we offer in our decorative concrete service, including how each finish holds up under Dallas-area heat and clay soil conditions.
Addison's residential properties - mostly townhomes and older apartment-adjacent homes built in the 1970s through 1990s - often have original concrete driveways that have been through 30 to 50 years of Dallas-area clay cycling. The base compaction standards from that era did not match what we know today, which is why so many of those surfaces show panel displacement and edge cracking. We replace them with properly designed slabs that account for the soil movement here.
Addison has one of the highest concentrations of restaurants and commercial businesses per square mile in the Dallas area. That means a lot of parking lots, drive approaches, and paved surfaces taking daily abuse from vehicle traffic and North Texas heat cycles. We pour commercial parking lots in Addison with the thickness and joint spacing the traffic load and clay soil require.
Townhome and single-family property owners in Addison often have smaller outdoor footprints than large-lot suburban properties, which makes every square foot of patio count more. A properly drained and finished concrete patio in Addison extends outdoor living season from early March through late November most years. We pour patios with drainage slope away from the structure and joints placed to handle clay soil movement.
Commercial properties along Belt Line Road and the Dallas North Tollway corridor in Addison have interior and exterior concrete floors that take constant foot traffic and vehicle load. Aging commercial floor slabs from the 1970s and 1980s often need full replacement when joint deterioration and clay-induced cracking reaches the point where patching is no longer cost-effective. We replace commercial concrete floors with slabs designed for the actual load and soil conditions present.
Addison's older residential areas have sidewalk panels that have shifted and cracked through decades of clay soil movement and occasional root intrusion from mature landscape trees. Raised or uneven panels are a safety and liability issue on any property. We replace damaged sections with properly prepared panels that sit level and stay that way longer than a surface-only repair would.
Addison is a small but unusually dense municipality - roughly 4.4 square miles packed with restaurants, hotels, offices, and apartment complexes along with the Dallas Addison Airport. That density means a higher-than-average ratio of paved surface to land area, and most of those paved surfaces - parking lots, drive approaches, walkways, and driveways - were poured during the 1970s through 1990s construction boom that built most of Addison. After 30 to 50 years of North Texas heat cycles and Dallas County clay soil movement, that era of flatwork is showing its age. Commercial properties along Belt Line Road and the Dallas North Tollway corridor see especially heavy wear from daily vehicle traffic on top of the soil movement that affects every property in this part of the county.
The residential side of Addison is predominantly townhomes and apartment complexes rather than the large-lot single-family neighborhoods common in nearby Carrollton or Farmers Branch. That distinction matters for concrete work because multi-family and attached properties have HOA rules, shared access, and scheduling constraints that affect how and when crews can work. Addison also sits in Dallas County, where permit requirements apply to most concrete work. Understanding those requirements and pulling permits correctly protects property owners at the time of sale or refinance.
Our crew works throughout Addison regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. We pull permits through the Town of Addison for residential and applicable commercial work. Belt Line Road and the Dallas North Tollway are the main corridors we use to navigate to and through Addison, and we know the difference between the commercial-heavy sections near the airport and the quieter townhome-lined streets on the east side of town. The dense restaurant and office district along Belt Line sees concrete wear patterns different from anything in a typical residential suburb, and we account for that in how we approach commercial flatwork scopes in this area.
Addison borders Carrollton to the north and is a short drive from Irving to the southwest. We work across all three areas, and the Dallas County clay conditions that apply in Addison carry through the entire corridor. Knowing the roads and the property types across this part of the metro means we can get to Addison jobs efficiently and apply the same approach to subgrade and joint design that we use throughout the region.
Reach out by phone or contact form. We respond to all Addison inquiries within 1 business day to schedule a free on-site estimate - no obligation and no sales pressure on either residential or commercial work.
We visit the property, look at existing conditions, check subgrade and drainage, and review your options. Commercial and residential projects each get a written quote after the visit - pricing questions get a specific answer, not a vague range.
We pull required permits through the Town of Addison before the crew starts. Demolition, subgrade compaction, forming, reinforcement, and the pour follow in sequence. Most Addison residential jobs complete in one active day; commercial flatwork timelines depend on scope.
We finish the surface, saw-cut or tool joints on schedule, and review cure timing and traffic restrictions before leaving. Any required city inspection is coordinated and closed out before we consider the job done.
We serve Addison homeowners and commercial property managers. Free on-site quote, no obligation, response within 1 business day.
(214) 432-7164Addison is a small town in Dallas County - roughly 4.4 square miles - located just north of Dallas proper, bordered by Carrollton to the north, Dallas to the east and south, and Farmers Branch to the west. Despite its small land area, Addison has a daytime population much larger than its residential count of around 15,000 to 17,000 people, due to the concentration of offices, hotels, and restaurants packed within its borders. The town is widely known across the Dallas area for its Belt Line Road restaurant corridor, which draws diners from across the Metroplex. Dallas Addison Airport, a general aviation facility that ranks among the busiest in the country by operations, sits within the town and occupies a significant share of its land area. You can read more about Addison on its Wikipedia page.
The residential character of Addison is distinct from most nearby suburbs. Multi-family housing - apartment complexes and townhomes built largely between the 1970s and early 1990s - makes up the majority of the housing stock rather than detached single-family homes. Addison Circle Park is a well-known gathering space at the center of town, surrounded by mixed-use development. The Dallas North Tollway runs along the western edge of Addison and connects residents quickly to Plano and Frisco to the north or downtown Dallas to the south. Nearby Farmers Branch to the west shares similar Dallas County clay soil conditions, and many of the same concrete challenges - cracked flatwork, shifting driveways, and aging commercial paving - apply to property owners throughout this part of the county.
Get a durable, professionally poured concrete driveway built to last.
Learn MoreAdd beauty and texture to surfaces with decorative stamped concrete.
Learn MoreCustomized decorative finishes that enhance any indoor or outdoor surface.
Learn MoreEngineered retaining walls that hold soil and improve your landscape.
Learn MoreLevel, sealed concrete floors installed for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreSturdy concrete steps built for safety, curb appeal, and longevity.
Learn MoreSolid slab foundations poured to precise structural specifications.
Learn MoreCommercial-grade concrete parking lots built for high traffic loads.
Learn MoreProperly sized concrete footings supporting structures from the ground up.
Learn MoreRestore settling foundations to level with professional raising techniques.
Learn MoreWe serve all of Addison with free on-site estimates and a 1-business-day response. Get a written quote and clear answers before any work begins.
Addison sits on the same expansive clay as the broader Dallas area. We build subgrade preparation, slab thickness, and joint spacing around that soil profile on every pour - not as a standard-disclaimer mention, but as the actual design driver for the work.
Addison's mix of apartment complexes, townhomes, office buildings, and restaurants along Belt Line Road means we see a wider range of concrete project types here than in a purely residential suburb. We work across both property types without switching crews or subcontracting either out.
Every Addison inquiry receives a response within 1 business day to schedule a free on-site estimate. The quote delivered after that visit is written, itemized, and specific - not a ballpark revised on the day of work.
Advanced Coppell Concrete is based in Coppell and has worked across the North Dallas and Metroplex area since 2020. Addison is a regular part of our territory, and we know Belt Line Road, the Tollway corridor, and the residential sections on both sides of the airport.
Addison properties - whether a commercial parking lot off Belt Line Road or a townhome driveway in a residential pocket near the airport - all sit on the same Dallas County clay. Our work in Addison draws on the same foundation of subgrade preparation, correct joint placement, and permitted work that we apply across every part of the Metroplex we serve.