89 Market Street, Garfield, NJ 07026 Mon–Sat 8 AM – 7 PM
Concrete Work · Essex County

Concrete Work in Newark, NJ

Pre-1940 brick row houses everywhere you look.

17 minfrom our Garfield yardZIP 07102Essex CountyNJ Lic. #13VH10343500
17Min from yardNewark, NJ
17-min drive
8 mi from Garfield yard
24-hour estimate
Written, no obligation
Essex County
Newark, NJ 07102
Licensed & insured
NJ #13VH10343500
About concrete work jobs in Newark

What concrete work in Newark actually looks like

Site conditions, housing stock, and the kinds of projects we get called for in this town — the local context behind our estimates and recommendations.

Housing stock

Pre-1940 brick row houses through the central wards, multi-family walkup apartments, and detached single-family in Forest Hill and Vailsburg. Most common asks here: Full-façade brick repointing on row houses; Lintel and steel angle replacement above storefronts; Bluestone front-step and stoop rebuilds; Chimney work on three-deckers.

Neighborhoods we serve
  • Ironbound
  • Forest Hill
  • North Ward
  • Vailsburg
  • Weequahic

Common project types

The work we get called for most in Newark, based on what the local building stock and site conditions tend to need.

  • Full-façade brick repointing on row houses
  • Lintel and steel angle replacement above storefronts
  • Bluestone front-step and stoop rebuilds
  • Chimney work on three-deckers

Local site conditions

Conditions specific to Newark that shape how we approach prep, drainage, and material choice on every job.

  • Multi-family façade work in Forest Hill and the North Ward needs preservation-office sign-off — we prepare mortar samples with the application
  • Pre-1940 brick is soft; Portland mortar repointing fails within five years and we see the consequences regularly
  • Tight urban lots require curbside staging and parking-enforcement coordination for every scaffold setup
What we build

Concrete Work — what's included

Driveways, walkways, slabs, and footings with proper subgrade compaction and clean control joints.

  • Broom-finish driveways and aprons, 4 in. residential / 6 in. heavy-load
  • Exposed aggregate patios and walkways
  • Stamped and integrally colored concrete
  • Footings for porches, garages, generators, and outdoor kitchens
How we build it

Concrete Work — start to finish

The four stages we run on every concrete work job. Same workflow whether it's a small fix or a full install.

1

Excavation & subgrade

Strip topsoil. Cut to depth (typically 8 inches for a residential driveway). Compact subgrade in lifts with a plate compactor — this is the step that decides whether the pour lasts.

Stage 1 of 4
2

Form, base, and reinforcement

Form boards staked and leveled. 4 inches of compacted 3/4-inch clean stone base. Rebar or mesh placed on chairs so reinforcement actually sits inside the slab, not on the dirt.

Stage 2 of 4
3

Pour, screed, and finish

Concrete placed, screeded, bull-floated. We hand-edge, broom-finish (or stamp / expose), and saw-cut control joints at proper spacing — typically every 8–10 feet for a residential slab.

Stage 3 of 4
4

Cure and seal

Cure compound the same day. Stay off it for 24 hours, light traffic at 72, full load at 28 days. Optional densifier sealer in week two locks out road salt.

Stage 4 of 4
Newark questions

About concrete work work in Newark

The four things people actually want to know before they sign an estimate.

Will it crack?

Concrete is going to crack — we control where. Saw-cut control joints at proper spacing tell the slab where to crack, so the cracks land inside the joints and read as joints instead of failures. A slab without joints cracks anyway, just randomly.

Stamped vs. exposed aggregate?

Stamped is a textured top layer pressed into wet concrete — gives you a brick or slate look at a concrete price. Exposed aggregate washes off the cement paste to reveal the stone underneath. Stamped looks more decorative; exposed aggregate is grippier and reads more contemporary.

How thick should my driveway be?

4 inches over a compacted base for a residential driveway with passenger vehicles. 6 inches if you have a heavy truck, RV, or trailer. The base matters as much as the slab thickness — a 6-inch slab on bad subgrade fails before a 4-inch slab on a proper base.

Should I seal new concrete?

Yes — but not in year one. Concrete needs to cure and finish off-gassing first. A breathable penetrating sealer in year two protects against deicing salts (a real issue in North Jersey), and we'll come back to apply it if you want.

More services in Newark

What else we build in Newark.

Same crew, same warranty. Click any service to see scope and process for Newark specifically.

Concrete Work across Essex County and nearby

Other towns we run concrete work jobs in.

Same crew, same yard, same warranty. Pick a town to see the local scope and conditions specific to that address.

Free Estimate · Newark, NJ

Ready to talk through your concrete work project in Newark?

We're 17 minutes from your door. Tell us what you're building and we'll walk the site, check footings and drainage, and leave you a written estimate within 24 hours.

  • Site visit booked within 24–48 hours
  • 5-year written workmanship warranty
  • Licensed (NJ #13VH10343500), insured, family-owned
Or call for a fast quote(973) 272-5869

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