Advanced Coppell Concrete works throughout Hurst, TX with concrete retaining walls, driveway replacement, patios, and garage floor pours. Hurst homes were mostly built from the 1950s through the 1980s on Tarrant County expansive clay, and we understand what that means for any concrete project in the HEB area. We have been serving this part of the Metroplex since 2020.

Hurst lots with any grade change need correctly designed retaining walls to hold soil back and redirect drainage away from the house. Tarrant County clay applies substantial lateral pressure behind any wall, and undersized structures fail faster than you might expect. Learn more about the design and construction standards we follow in our concrete retaining walls service, including reinforcement and drainage details specific to North Texas clay soil.
Most homes in Hurst were built in the 1950s through the 1980s, which puts original concrete driveways at 40 to 70 years of age. Decades of Tarrant County clay movement produce the cracking, panel displacement, and surface scaling visible on driveways all over the city. We remove the old slab, compact the base correctly, and pour a properly jointed replacement built for the clay soil underneath.
Garage slabs in Hurst's older homes are frequently thin and poorly reinforced, and years of soil cycling have left them cracked and uneven. Replacing a failing garage floor gives you a level, clean surface for vehicles and storage. We pour garage floors in Hurst with the thickness and reinforcement the soil conditions require.
North Texas outdoor season runs from early spring through late fall, and a properly built concrete patio in Hurst extends that time with a surface that stays level and drains correctly. We pour patios with drainage slope away from the foundation and control joints sized for the clay soil movement typical to this part of Tarrant County.
Hurst neighborhoods have mature oaks and elms whose roots find their way under sidewalk panels and lift them over time. Raised concrete near tree roots is a tripping hazard and a city code issue. We remove damaged panels, address root issues as needed, and replace sections with correct base prep so the new concrete stays flush.
Pool decks in Hurst face two challenges at once: water saturation around the pool perimeter and the shrink-swell clay beneath the slab. Without proper expansion joints and drainage slope, a pool deck around an older Hurst-area pool will crack and lift at the edges within a few seasons. We design and pour pool deck replacements that account for both pressures.
Hurst is a fully built-out suburb in Tarrant County with a housing stock that dates primarily from the 1950s through the 1980s. Most homes are single-story or two-story brick-and-frame structures on modest lots with concrete driveways, attached garages, and wood privacy fences. At 40 to 70 years of age, the original concrete flatwork on these properties has been through enough clay soil cycles to be at or past the point where repair alone is not the right answer. The expansive Tarrant County clay beneath the entire HEB area swells with fall and spring rains and contracts sharply during summer drought. That movement is gradual but relentless, and slabs poured without adequate subgrade preparation or proper joint placement accumulate damage faster than slabs that were done correctly from the start.
North Texas storm seasons add another layer of demand. Spring thunderstorm systems roll through this part of Tarrant County regularly, sometimes dropping large hail and producing high winds that can damage fences, roofs, and outdoor concrete structures in a single afternoon. Mature oaks and elms - common in Hurst neighborhoods - add a root intrusion risk to sidewalks and driveways that younger, newer suburbs do not see to the same degree. The Highway 183 commercial corridor adds a commercial dimension, with retail and service properties around North East Mall carrying aging flatwork on high-traffic pavement that needs more frequent attention than residential surfaces.
Our crew works throughout Hurst regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. We pull permits through the City of Hurst building division for residential projects across the city. Highway 183 (Airport Freeway) and Loop 820 are the main corridors we use to reach Hurst from our Coppell base, and Precinct Line Road is the key north-south surface street through the city that we navigate regularly. Neighborhoods off the 820 loop to the south tend to have the oldest housing stock and the most accumulated flatwork wear. The density of mature trees in these older sections means root intrusion under driveways and sidewalks is a common part of what we find at site visits.
Hurst is the westernmost city in the HEB area, bordering Bedford to the east and sitting a short drive from Grapevine to the northwest. We work regularly across all three cities, and the soil conditions and housing stock are similar enough throughout the area that our Hurst crews bring relevant local experience to every job without a learning curve.
Reach out by phone or the contact form. We respond to all Hurst inquiries within 1 business day to schedule a free on-site estimate - no obligation and no sales pressure.
We visit the property, look at the existing conditions, check grade and drainage, and walk through your options. A written quote with all costs comes from this visit - pricing questions get a specific answer here, not a vague range.
We pull required permits through the City of Hurst building division before the crew starts work. Demolition, subgrade compaction, forming, reinforcement, and the pour all follow in the correct sequence. Most Hurst residential jobs complete in one active day on site.
We finish the surface, saw-cut control joints on schedule, and review cure timing and traffic restrictions with you before leaving. Any required city inspection is coordinated and closed out before we finish the job.
We serve all of Hurst, TX and the surrounding HEB area. We respond within 1 business day and provide a written quote after your free on-site visit.
(214) 432-7164Hurst is a city of approximately 35,000 to 40,000 residents in Tarrant County, incorporated in 1952 and largely built out through the postwar decades. The city covers roughly 10 square miles and sits between Fort Worth and Dallas, making it part of the dense suburban core of the Metroplex. Almost all of Hurst is residential or commercial - single-family homes on modest lots, with retail concentrated along the Highway 183 corridor where North East Mall anchors the main shopping and service district in the area. The mall has long served as one of the primary retail destinations for the HEB area and is one of the most recognizable landmarks in Hurst. Residential neighborhoods sit just off this commercial strip, and the transition from busy highway service road to quiet residential street can happen within a block or two.
Hurst is served by Birdville Independent School District, and L.D. Bell High School on Brown Trail is the main high school for Hurst residents - a familiar landmark for families throughout the city. The city blends directly into Euless to the southeast and Bedford to the east, forming the tightly knit HEB community that residents identify with across all three cities. Loop 820 runs along the southern edge of the city and provides quick freeway access to both Fort Worth and the broader Metroplex network. Most of the homes in the neighborhoods between Highway 183 and the 820 loop date to the 1960s and 1970s and represent the bulk of the concrete repair and replacement work we handle in Hurst.
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 MoreAdvanced Coppell Concrete covers all of Hurst and the HEB area. Call now or fill out our form for a free written estimate within 1 business day.
Hurst sits on the same expansive clay as every city in the HEB area. We account for that soil movement in subgrade prep, slab thickness, and joint placement on every job - not as an afterthought, but as the foundation of how we plan the work from the start.
We pull required permit applications through the City of Hurst and coordinate all inspections on applicable projects. The work is documented correctly from the start, which protects you when you sell or refinance the property.
Every Hurst inquiry receives a response within 1 business day to schedule a free on-site estimate. The quote we deliver after that visit is in writing, with all costs spelled out - not a ballpark that changes on the day of the pour.
Advanced Coppell Concrete is based in Coppell and has worked throughout the Dallas-Fort Worth area since 2020. Hurst is a regular part of our work territory, and we know the streets, the older subdivision layouts, and the soil and drainage conditions common to this part of Tarrant County.
The difference between concrete that lasts in Hurst and concrete that cracks within a few years comes down to what happens before the pour - subgrade prep, compaction, joint placement, and drainage planning. Those steps take more care than surface finishing, and they are where experience with Tarrant County clay soil matters most.