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Concrete Repair & Epoxy Flooring in Kersey, CO

Concrete Doctor has been Colorado's repair-first concrete specialist since 1994, and we proudly serve Kersey and the surrounding Weld County area. From cracked driveways on rural acreage properties to garage floors in newer subdivisions, our team brings proven systems and 30-plus years of Front Range experience to every job. We believe in extending the life of what you already have — replacement is the last resort, not the first suggestion.

Concrete in Kersey: What to Know

Kersey sits on the high plains of Weld County, roughly halfway between Greeley and Fort Morgan along the South Platte River corridor. The area is a mix of longtime agricultural properties, modest ranch-style homes, and newer rural residential lots — many with detached garages, long driveways, and exposed concrete flatwork that takes a beating from the elements year-round. Concrete poured decades ago on these properties often faces compounding stress from shifting soils and harsh weather without ever having been sealed or maintained. Weld County's soils are notorious for containing expansive clays and bentonite deposits that swell when wet and contract sharply during dry spells. This constant ground movement transfers directly into driveways, patio slabs, and garage floors — opening cracks, lifting edges, and creating trip hazards over time. Winter brings additional punishment: the plains east of the Rockies experience dozens of freeze-thaw cycles each season, and magnesium chloride de-icing salt used on nearby highways and local roads accelerates surface scaling and spalling on any concrete that isn't properly sealed. At higher elevation and with fewer urban heat-island effects than Denver proper, Kersey also sees intense high-altitude UV exposure that degrades uncoated surfaces faster than property owners often realize. Whether you're dealing with a crumbling driveway apron, a dusty garage floor, or a patio that's been settling unevenly for years, Concrete Doctor has the right repair system for Weld County conditions.

Weld County Soils and What They Do to Concrete

The expansive clay and bentonite soils common throughout Weld County create one of the more demanding environments for concrete flatwork anywhere on the Front Range. As moisture levels change with irrigation cycles, spring snowmelt, and summer dry-outs, the ground beneath slabs shifts in ways that gradually open cracks, tilt panels, and separate joints. Kersey properties on larger rural lots may see even more dramatic movement because there's often less compacted base material or drainage infrastructure than you'd find in a denser suburban neighborhood. Concrete Doctor's repair approach begins with understanding what's happening underground. We evaluate whether a crack is structural or superficial, whether a slab has settled uniformly or is pivoting at a joint, and whether the substrate needs attention before any surface repair makes sense. Patching over an active problem only delays the inevitable — our diagnostic step ensures the fix we apply is built to last in these specific soil conditions.

Freeze-Thaw Cycles on the High Plains

Eastern Weld County sits far enough from the mountains that it misses the insulating cloud cover that Denver sometimes gets, but close enough to the Continental Divide that winter cold arrives hard and fast. The result is a high number of freeze-thaw cycles each season — days that push above freezing followed by nights that drop well below. Water that has worked its way into even hairline cracks expands when it freezes, widening those cracks incrementally with each cycle. Sealing and protecting concrete before winter is one of the highest-value maintenance steps a Kersey property owner can take. When existing surfaces are already damaged, resurfacing with a bonded overlay restores a sound, sealed surface that handles freeze-thaw stress far better than the original concrete in poor condition. Concrete Doctor's Westcoat-based systems are formulated specifically for Colorado's climate extremes, providing flexibility and adhesion that hold up through the full range of Front Range temperatures. For driveways and exterior flatwork, we also address joint spacing and edge conditions — areas where water entry is most likely and where freeze-thaw damage typically starts. Getting those details right is what separates a repair that lasts from one that reopens the following spring.

Garage Floors and Interior Coatings for Kersey Homes

Many homes in and around Kersey have attached or detached garages that double as workshops, storage spaces, or equipment bays for agricultural machinery and vehicles. The concrete floors in these spaces endure oil, hydraulic fluid, fertilizer residue, and the constant traffic of heavy equipment — conditions that quickly degrade bare concrete and create permanent staining and dusting. Epoxy and polyaspartic floor coatings transform these spaces into durable, easy-to-clean surfaces that hold up to real working-property use. Concrete Doctor preps each floor thoroughly — grinding the surface, addressing any existing cracks or spalling, and applying a system matched to the specific demands of the space. For garages that see agricultural chemicals or heavy tires, we recommend broadcast quartz or chip systems that add texture and chemical resistance beyond what a standard paint or roll-on coating provides. Basement floors in Kersey homes also benefit from protective coatings, particularly where ground moisture and clay soil movement create humidity fluctuations. A moisture-tolerant epoxy system prevents dusting, resists staining, and gives finished or utility basements a surface that's easy to maintain for decades.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — Kersey is part of our regular Weld County service area. Our team makes the trip from Lakewood routinely for jobs throughout the eastern Front Range. We schedule free on-site estimates so we can assess conditions in person before recommending any scope of work.
In most cases, cracked driveways on Weld County properties can be repaired and resurfaced rather than replaced. We evaluate the crack patterns, slab movement, and base conditions to determine the right approach. Repair-first is our default position — replacement only makes sense when the slab has failed structurally beyond salvage.
That chalky residue is most often efflorescence — salts migrating to the surface as moisture moves through the concrete — or scaling caused by de-icing salt and freeze-thaw damage. Both conditions indicate the surface needs cleaning and sealing, and in more advanced cases, resurfacing. Left unaddressed, the deterioration continues and deepens each winter.
A properly installed epoxy or polyaspartic system on a well-prepared floor typically lasts 10 to 20 years in normal residential garage use. Polyaspartic topcoats are especially UV-stable, which matters for garages with exposure to natural light. Correct surface preparation — including moisture testing and mechanical grinding — is the single biggest factor in long-term adhesion and durability.
Late spring through early fall is ideal, when temperatures are consistently above 50°F and ground conditions are stable. That said, Concrete Doctor works year-round and can schedule interior work like garage and basement floor coatings any time. Call (303) 988-2558 and we'll help you find the right window for your specific project.

Need Concrete Repair in Kersey?

Get a free on-site estimate from Concrete Doctor — serving Kersey, CO and the greater Denver metro since 1994.

Repair first. Replacement only when necessary.