CO CITY

Concrete Repair & Epoxy Flooring in Severance, CO

Concrete Doctor has been repairing and protecting concrete across the Colorado Front Range since 1994, and Severance homeowners and businesses have relied on our crew for honest, repair-first solutions that extend the life of driveways, garage floors, patios, and commercial slabs. We're a family-owned operation out of Lakewood — not a franchise — and we bring the same crew and the same standards to every Weld County job. If the concrete can be saved, we'll save it.

Concrete in Severance: What to Know

Severance sits on the northeastern Colorado plains in Weld County, about 12 miles east of Fort Collins and roughly 57 miles from our Lakewood shop. The community has grown quickly over the past decade — newer subdivisions have pushed out into the agricultural tableland, meaning most residential concrete here ranges from brand-new to about 15 years old. That might sound too young to worry about, but Weld County's expansive bentonite-rich soils shift seasonally, and slabs poured on improperly prepared subgrades can crack and heave within just a few years of installation. The climate on the open plains around Severance is unforgiving to concrete. Winters bring hard freezes followed by rapid daytime warm-ups — a pattern that drives dozens of freeze-thaw cycles each season, opening and widening existing cracks with each cycle. The Front Range also sees serious use of magnesium chloride on roads, and that salt migrates onto driveways and garage floors via vehicle tires, accelerating surface scaling and spalling. High-altitude UV intensity in this part of Colorado degrades unsealed or uncoated concrete faster than many homeowners expect. Early intervention almost always costs far less than slab replacement. Beyond residential driveways and garage floors, Severance's growing commercial corridors along Harmony Road and US-85 include warehouse slabs, shop floors, and parking areas that take heavy vehicle traffic. Industrial and agricultural property owners in the area face unique wear patterns — heavy equipment, fuel and chemical exposure, and year-round outdoor exposure. Concrete Doctor's range of repair, resurfacing, and coating systems is built to handle both ends of that spectrum.

How Weld County Soils Damage Concrete Over Time

The ground beneath Severance is loaded with expansive clay and bentonite — soils that absorb moisture and swell, then shrink and crack when they dry out. This cycle of swelling and subsidence exerts lateral and upward pressure on concrete slabs, causing cracks that start hairline-thin and widen with every wet season. In newer developments where lots were rough-graded quickly before construction, compaction inconsistencies make the problem even more pronounced. When we assess a slab in Severance, we're not just looking at the surface — we're evaluating what's happening underneath. A crack pattern that fans outward from a low corner usually signals settlement, while parallel horizontal cracks near control joints point more to thermal stress. Diagnosing correctly is what lets us apply the right repair method rather than a cosmetic patch that fails in a year.

Freeze-Thaw Reality on the Northeast Front Range

Severance winters are not gentle. Temperatures routinely swing from single digits overnight to the 40s or 50s during the day — sometimes within hours after a chinook rolls through. Each freeze-thaw event forces water that has entered a crack or surface void to expand by roughly nine percent as it freezes, mechanically prying apart the concrete around it. Multiply that by 30 or 40 cycles across a single winter and you can see why cracks that were barely noticeable in October become serious structural issues by March. Our crack and joint repair materials — elastic polyurethane compounds rated for high-movement environments — are specifically chosen to flex with this thermal cycling rather than crack again alongside the repair. Surface sealers and coatings we apply are vapor-permeable and tested for Colorado's UV exposure, ensuring they don't bubble or peel when spring arrives. Proactive sealing before winter sets in is the single highest-value maintenance investment most Severance property owners can make. We offer free on-site estimates, so there's no cost to finding out where your concrete stands before the next freeze season hits.

From Driveways to Commercial Floors: What We Handle in Severance

Residential work in Severance typically centers on driveways, garage floors, and backyard patios — concrete that takes year-round weather abuse and daily vehicle traffic. We resurface spalled surfaces, seal or coat them against future salt and UV damage, and repair cracks before they migrate further. Garage floor coating systems — epoxy base with polyaspartic topcoat — are especially popular here because they protect against the magnesium chloride that drips off vehicles all winter. On the commercial side, we work with shop owners, small warehouses, and agricultural operations that need durable, cleanable floor surfaces. Quartz broadcast and metallic epoxy systems provide both function and appearance for customer-facing spaces, while heavy-duty polyaspartic coatings handle the punishment of forklifts and chemical spills in working environments. Every job starts with the same question: can we repair and restore, or does this slab genuinely need replacement? In most cases, the answer is repair — and that answer saves clients thousands.

Frequently Asked Questions

We regularly serve Weld County, including Severance — it's about 57 miles from our Lakewood base and well within our service range. We've been working the Denver metro and Front Range corridor since 1994 and are familiar with the soil and climate conditions specific to the northeastern plains. Travel does not affect our estimate process; we'll come out at no charge to assess the work.
It's more common than homeowners expect in newer Weld County developments. Expansive clay soils and bentonite in this area shift significantly with moisture changes, and if subgrade preparation was rushed during the area's rapid growth, slabs settle unevenly and crack early. The good news is that early-stage cracking almost always qualifies for repair and resurfacing rather than full replacement. A free estimate will tell you exactly where things stand.
Yes — that's precisely what polyaspartic topcoats are engineered for. Magnesium chloride, the primary de-icer used on Colorado roads, is chemically aggressive and will attack bare concrete over time, but a properly prepared and coated floor seals out moisture and chemical intrusion. We surface-prep the concrete thoroughly before any coating goes down, which is the step that determines whether a coating lasts five years or fifteen.
Resurfacing bonds a polymer-modified overlay to the existing slab, renewing the surface without removing the structural base underneath. It works when the slab itself is structurally sound but the surface has scaled, spalled, or worn thin. Full replacement makes sense when the slab has settled dramatically, broken into large chunks, or the subgrade has failed entirely. We'll give you an honest read on which category your concrete falls into — we're not in the business of selling replacements when a repair will do the job.
Late spring — once overnight lows are consistently above 40°F — is the ideal window in Severance. The concrete has completed its last freeze cycle, any new cracks from winter movement are visible and stable, and coating or sealant materials cure properly in warmer temperatures. Waiting until late summer means losing a full winter's worth of protection. We can schedule a free estimate any time to get on the calendar before the spring rush fills up.

Need Concrete Repair in Severance?

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

Repair first. Replacement only when necessary.