
Advanced Little Rock Concrete Company handles slab foundation building, driveway replacement, sidewalk repair, patio construction, and more for Jacksonville homeowners. We know the postwar housing stock, the Pulaski County clay, and what it takes to get concrete right in this city. We reply within one business day.

Jacksonville homes built in the 1950s through the 1980s sit on foundations that have absorbed decades of movement from Pulaski County clay - and many are showing the results. Whether you need a new concrete slab foundation for an addition, a replacement slab for a structure whose base has failed, or a fresh pour for a new accessory building, we size the slab and reinforcement to what the soil here actually demands.
Ranch homes near Little Rock Air Force Base and throughout older Jacksonville neighborhoods have driveways that were poured decades ago on base material that did not account for clay soil cycling. Cracked, sunken, and uneven concrete is the result. A new driveway poured on properly compacted base with the right control joint layout handles Jacksonville soil movement far better than what was there originally.
Postwar Jacksonville neighborhoods have sidewalks that have been heaving and cracking for 30 to 50 years under the pressure of tree roots and seasonal soil movement. Replacement with proper root treatment and base depth is the right answer for streets throughout the older parts of the city, where patching alone has stopped holding.
Attached garages are standard on Jacksonville ranch homes, and the original concrete floors in those garages are now 30 to 70 years old in many cases. Surface spalling, staining, and cracks from soil movement are common. A new garage floor pour changes how the space looks and how well it performs under daily vehicle and storage use.
When Jacksonville slab homes develop voids under the foundation from clay shrinkage, sections of the slab can sink and create uneven floors, sticking doors, and cracks at window corners. Foundation raising addresses the settlement by restoring support under the slab before the problem compounds into structural damage that requires far more extensive work.
Many Jacksonville homeowners - particularly those who have lived in their ranch homes for 20 or more years - are adding backyard patio space as they invest in the properties long-term. A concrete patio built on a solid base holds up to Arkansas heat and heavy spring rain without the maintenance problems that wood decking accumulates over time in this climate.
Jacksonville grew rapidly after Little Rock Air Force Base was established, and a large portion of the city's housing stock was built during the postwar boom of the 1950s through the 1980s. These homes - typically single-story ranch designs with slab or crawl space foundations - are now 40 to 70 years old, and the concrete work done on those properties was built for a different era of materials and standards. The clay soil throughout Pulaski County has been moving under those slabs for decades, expanding in wet seasons and contracting in dry ones, and the original concrete simply was not designed to absorb that much cumulative stress.
The military community aspect of Jacksonville also creates a specific pattern of deferred maintenance. Military families on short-term assignments often rent rather than own, and rental properties in the city can go years without the kind of concrete upkeep that owner-occupied homes receive. When those properties change hands or receive new long-term residents, the backlog of cracked driveways, uneven sidewalks, and deteriorating garage floors often needs to be addressed in full. Jacksonville's spring flooding and ice storm risk add seasonal urgency to concrete repairs that have been held off through several cycles of damage and temporary fixes.
Our crew works throughout Jacksonville regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. Foundation and structural projects in Jacksonville require permits processed through the City of Jacksonville, and we are familiar with the requirements so we can advise you on what your project will need before scheduling begins. The City of Jacksonville handles building permits and inspections for structural concrete work in the city.
The city sits about 15 miles northeast of Little Rock along Highway 67/167, and the neighborhoods closest to Little Rock Air Force Base on the west side of town tend to have the oldest housing stock and the most accumulated concrete maintenance needs. Newer residential developments on Jacksonville's east and north sides have homes from the 1990s and 2000s that are reaching the age where driveways, patios, and garage floors start showing wear. Dupree Park and the surrounding family neighborhoods represent the heart of the residential community we serve most frequently in this city.
Jacksonville borders Sherwood and Cabot, and we cover all three cities with the same crew. If your project is in Cabot or if neighbors in Sherwood have referred you, we serve those areas too. We also work regularly in Sherwood and can often coordinate projects across these adjacent cities in the same week.
Call us or fill out the contact form and we will reply within one business day. Most Jacksonville jobs can be scheduled for an estimate visit within the same week you reach out.
We visit the property, assess the soil conditions and existing concrete, and give you a written estimate before any work begins. There is no charge for the estimate visit, and you will know the full cost before you decide to move forward.
We remove existing concrete if needed, address any base or soil issues found during removal, form the new work, and pour on the scheduled day. You do not need to be home during the work, but we will update you on progress.
After the pour we give you clear curing guidelines - typically 24 to 48 hours before foot traffic and 7 days before vehicles. We clean the site before we leave and follow up if any questions come up during the cure.
We serve Jacksonville homeowners with free estimates, written quotes, and no-pressure replies within one business day.
(501) 621-2844Jacksonville is a mid-size city of roughly 28,000 to 30,000 people in Pulaski County, sitting about 15 miles northeast of downtown Little Rock. The city exists in its current form largely because of Little Rock Air Force Base, one of the largest C-130 training installations in the world. The base shaped Jacksonville's growth pattern from the 1950s onward and continues to be the city's largest employer, drawing a mix of active-duty military families and long-term civilian residents. The result is a community with deep roots in public service and a steady population that renews itself as military assignments rotate in and out.
Most of Jacksonville's residential neighborhoods are made up of single-story ranch homes built between the 1950s and the 1980s, with newer subdivisions on the east and north sides of the city added in the 1990s and 2000s. Median home values sit well below the national average, and most homeowners here are working with practical budgets focused on maintenance and lasting repairs rather than luxury renovations. The city has its own government and school district separate from Little Rock, and residents take real pride in the community - including the Jacksonville Museum of Military History, which reflects the city's strong identity. Neighboring cities Cabot and North Little Rock are part of the same metro area and share many of the same housing and soil characteristics.
Get a durable, professionally finished concrete driveway built to last.
Learn MoreSafe, code-compliant concrete sidewalks installed for any property.
Learn MoreSolid concrete retaining walls that control erosion and add structure.
Learn MoreLevel, long-lasting concrete floors for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreDurable concrete parking lots built for high-traffic commercial use.
Learn MoreCall us today or request a free estimate online - we reply within one business day and serve all Jacksonville neighborhoods.