Compacting the subgrade for sandy soil
We prep and roll the subgrade over Cape Coral's loose sand so the path keeps its line instead of heaving and dropping panel by panel where the brackish table runs shallow along the canals.
Paths that hold their grade on loose canal-lot sand, pitched so Gulf storms run off and finished to grip when the air hangs heavy and the surface is wet.
Credibility comes from how it's built, not from promises. Here's the order of operations on every concrete sidewalks & walkways job.
We prep and roll the subgrade over Cape Coral's loose sand so the path keeps its line instead of heaving and dropping panel by panel where the brackish table runs shallow along the canals.
A walkway goes down on a 4-inch base, the depth foot traffic asks for, with fiber and welded wire mesh worked through to lock the slab as one against the salt air.
Control joints are spaced so the slab has set lines to travel along as the sand beneath it shifts and drains through the seasons.
We set the pitch so storm rain runs off the path rather than pooling, since water standing on sand both undercuts the base and leaves the surface slick.
A broom finish gives grip underfoot through rain, salt spray off the canal, and the everyday Cape Coral damp.
Most contractors vanish after the deposit. We pick up the phone, show up when we say, and stand behind the work after the truck leaves. The follow-through is the difference.
A foreman we know runs your job and a vetted crew does the work, managed by Lucky's, one company accountable from the first call to the final walkthrough.
COI and lien waivers on file before we break ground. The documentation that lets commercial clients pay and gives homeowners peace of mind.
Prepped subgrade, reinforced and mixed to spec for the job, and proper curing. We build credibility through the process, not promises. On concrete sidewalks & walkways, that starts with compacting the subgrade for sandy soil.

Walkways and sidewalks price by width, thickness, and base prep over loose sand, plus the slope and slip-aware finish that frequent Gulf storms ask for. As a starting range, a walkway here generally lands somewhere around $8 to $13 per square foot. We set the number once we've walked the run with you.
Often, yes. A single panel that ground movement or roots have shoved up can frequently be ground flush or swapped out rather than redoing the whole run. We trace the cause and point you to the right fix.
Sand takes on and sheds water unevenly under the panels and settles them at different rates, with a shallow brackish table and tree roots adding to it, all the more on a canal lot. We rebuild the base, add fiber and mesh, and reset the joint layout on the repair so the heave doesn't just return.
Yes. We pour ramps and approaches to the slope and finish accessibility calls for, with a slip-aware texture for wet weather. Tell us the use and we pour to suit.
We tie joint spacing to the path's width and thickness so the movement stays penned. Skimp on joints and that is where uncontrolled cracking begins, and sand that drains and shifts gives you no room for it.
Foot traffic usually waits a few days while the slab gains strength, a touch longer in heavy Cape Coral humidity. We give you the walk-on dates for your particular pour before the first load lands.
You'll hear back from a real person, usually the same day. No call center, no runaround, no chasing us down.
Booking up fast this season. Or call (239) 291-7211