
Precision Enid Concrete is a concrete contractor serving Edmond, OK, providing decorative concrete finishes, driveway replacement, patio construction, and slab foundation work for homeowners throughout the city, with a crew that responds within one business day and understands how Edmond clay soil affects every pour.
Precision Enid Concrete is a concrete contractor serving Edmond, OK, providing decorative concrete finishes, driveway replacement, patio construction, and slab foundation work for homeowners throughout the city, with a crew that responds within one business day and understands how Edmond clay soil affects every pour.

Edmond homeowners invest in their properties, and decorative concrete gives driveways, patios, and pool surrounds a finished look that holds up to Oklahoma summers and freezing winters far better than pavers or wood. Our decorative concrete services are designed for Edmond clay soil conditions, where surface appearance and structural integrity both matter.
Many Edmond homes built between the 1970s and early 2000s have driveways that are now showing visible cracking, heaving, and surface scaling from decades of clay soil movement and freeze-thaw wear. A properly reinforced replacement driveway, poured with the right mix and joint spacing for local conditions, will outlast the original by a significant margin.
A concrete patio is one of the most practical investments for an Edmond home, giving families an outdoor living space that stands up to the region's long hot summers and holds its shape through the freeze-thaw cycles of winter. We size and reinforce every slab to handle the movement that Edmond soil produces through seasonal changes.
Adding a garage, workshop, or storage building on an Edmond property starts with a slab that accounts for the clay beneath. We engineer slab depth and steel reinforcement to resist the uplift and settlement that Oklahoma clay soils produce year after year, even on newer subdivisions on the north and east edges of town.
Stamped concrete is a popular upgrade for Edmond homeowners who want the look of stone or brick on a patio or entry without the installation complexity or freeze-thaw risk that individual pavers carry. The result is a continuous slab surface that handles Oklahoma winters better than loose-unit materials.
Sidewalk panels in older Edmond neighborhoods near the University of Central Oklahoma frequently crack and lift as tree roots and clay movement work on decades-old slabs. We replace panels to match current grade with proper expansion joints so the new sections stay level through seasonal soil changes.
Edmond sits on heavy clay soil that expands when Oklahoma rains arrive in spring and shrinks during the dry summer months. Every slab in the city goes through this cycle year after year. Driveways crack, garage floors develop long hairline fractures, and patios heave at the edges - not because the original pour was careless, but because the soil underneath never stops moving. A contractor who does not account for this during mix design, joint placement, and base preparation will produce work that fails sooner than it should.
The freeze-thaw pattern Edmond sees from December through February adds a separate layer of wear. Even a small surface crack lets moisture in, and when that moisture freezes it expands with enough force to widen the crack significantly. Homes built between the 1970s and early 2000s, which make up the bulk of Edmond housing, are now at the age where this cumulative damage is obvious. Matching the concrete mix to Oklahoma conditions and sealing surfaces before the cold season are standard steps on every job we run in Edmond.
Our crew works throughout Edmond regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. Edmond is a wide city covering about 87 square miles, with a mix of older neighborhoods near downtown and the University of Central Oklahoma campus on the south end, and newer subdivisions spreading north and east. The soil conditions and the age of the concrete flatwork differ noticeably between these areas, and we adjust base preparation and mix accordingly.
The older neighborhoods around UCO and downtown Edmond along Broadway tend to have homes from the 1940s through 1960s, with original concrete flatwork that has had decades of clay movement to work against it. The newer subdivisions in areas like Coffee Creek have younger concrete, but Oklahoma clay does not spare new pours - settling and cracking can appear within a few years even on freshly placed slabs. U.S. Highway 77 and Interstate 35 are the main corridors that connect Edmond to the rest of the metro.
We are also familiar with the adjacent areas surrounding Edmond. Jobs in Guthrie to the north are a regular part of our schedule. If you have questions about concrete work on your Edmond property, call us or submit the form below and we will respond within one business day.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form on this page. We respond to every Edmond inquiry within one business day and can often schedule an on-site visit the same week.
We visit the property, assess the existing concrete and soil conditions, and give you a written itemized estimate at no charge. This is also when we discuss any permit requirements with the City of Edmond that apply to your specific project.
We schedule the pour around the Edmond weather forecast to avoid rain and extreme heat. Most residential pours complete in one to two days of active work, and we keep the site clean throughout. You do not need to be present for the work to proceed.
New concrete needs at least seven days before foot traffic and two to four weeks before regular vehicle use. We walk through the finished work with you, explain care and sealing recommendations for the Oklahoma climate, and address any questions before we close out the job.
We serve homeowners throughout Edmond, OK. Responses within one business day. No obligation.
(580) 366-4082Edmond is a city of around 94,000 people directly north of Oklahoma City, and it is one of the fastest-growing communities in the state. It has a strong identity separate from the metro it borders - its own downtown along Broadway, the University of Central Oklahoma campus, and LibertyFest, one of Oklahoma's largest Fourth of July celebrations, which draws tens of thousands of residents each year. Edmond Public Schools is a consistent draw for families who settle in the city and stay. Housing ranges from post-war bungalows near downtown to large brick-veneer homes in newer subdivisions on the north and east sides.
The housing stock tells the story of the city's growth. Homes near the UCO campus and older streets off Broadway date to the 1940s through 1960s and often sit on original concrete that has seen seven decades of Oklahoma weather. Subdivisions like Coffee Creek and the neighborhoods spreading toward the Deer Creek area are much newer, built in the 2000s and 2010s, and sit on slab foundations over clay soil that moves steadily with seasonal moisture changes. Nearby, El Reno to the west and Yukon to the southwest are other communities we serve regularly in this part of the state.
Durable driveways built to handle Oklahoma weather and daily use.
Learn MoreCustom patios that extend your outdoor living space beautifully.
Learn MoreDecorative stamped finishes that replicate stone, brick, and more.
Learn MoreSafe, level sidewalks installed to code for homes and businesses.
Learn MoreProfessional floor pours for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreSolid entry steps built for safety and lasting first impressions.
Learn MoreCommercial parking lots designed for heavy traffic and longevity.
Learn MoreCall us today or request a free estimate online. We serve Edmond homeowners and respond within one business day.