Base before beauty
The decorative top is only as good as what holds it up, so the base gets the full coastal treatment: compacted over our mixed soils, set for a shallow water table, and graded to let water run clear.
Stone, brick, and slate looks poured in one continuous piece, set on a base built for coastal ground and sealed to handle salt air, the strong Gulf sun, and storm-season rain.
Credibility comes from how it's built, not from promises. Here's the order of operations on every stamped & decorative concrete job.
The decorative top is only as good as what holds it up, so the base gets the full coastal treatment: compacted over our mixed soils, set for a shallow water table, and graded to let water run clear.
Color goes in with integral pigment and release agents for tone that carries through the slab, not a skin-deep tint the fierce Coastal Bend sun will fade out within a season or two.
The pattern is pressed in while the concrete is still workable, so the texture reads sharp once it firms up in the humid coastal air.
A sealer enriches the color and guards the finish from salt air, hard sun, and frequent rain, all of which grind down unsealed decorative work faster than people expect this near the water.
Stamped concrete wants resealing on a schedule, and coastal salt, sun, and humidity bring that date forward. You get the timeline up front, before you sign, not after.
Most contractors vanish after the deposit. We pick up the phone, show up when we say, and stand behind the work after the truck leaves. The follow-through is the difference.
A foreman we know runs your job and a vetted crew does the work, managed by Lucky's, one company accountable from the first call to the final walkthrough.
COI and lien waivers on file before we break ground. The documentation that lets commercial clients pay and gives homeowners peace of mind.
Prepped subgrade, reinforced and mixed to spec for the job, and proper curing. We build credibility through the process, not promises. On stamped & decorative concrete, that starts with base before beauty.

It is a poured slab pressed with patterned mats while it is still soft and tinted to imitate stone, brick, or slate. The result reads like a field of pavers but pours as one solid piece, with no seams to pull weeds from or to drift apart.
Decorative work prices above plain flatwork, and the base beneath it still has to be compacted over coastal soil and graded to drain. As an opening range, stamped concrete tends to start around $14 to $22 per square foot, shifting with pattern detail, the number of colors, and the sealing. We give you a real quote after walking the space.
The base is built like any slab in this market, compacted over mixed soil, graded for drainage, with the steel kept covered against salt. The finish is the part that needs tending: salt air, strong sun, and constant humidity work on the color and sealer, so we reseal on a cycle. Pavers, by contrast, tend to heave and separate as the ground beneath them shifts and washes.
Stone, slate, brick, and plank patterns in coastal and earth tones that sit well on homes around the bay. We bring samples out and tune the look to your house and whatever hardscape is already there.
Figure on resealing every couple of years, and sooner on anything that catches full coastal sun, salt spray, or steady rain. We hand over a plain maintenance schedule so the color and finish keep their depth.
It can run smoother than a broom finish, so on walkways and anywhere that stays damp in the humid air we blend a non-slip additive into the sealer. We flag the spots in your layout where that matters.
Stamped concrete usually goes in for less than pavers, leaves no joints to weed, and won't drift apart the way pavers can once coastal ground moves or washes, though it does ask for periodic resealing. We walk you through the trade-offs straight.
You'll hear back from a real person, usually the same day. No call center, no runaround, no chasing us down.
Booking up fast this season. Or call (361) 326-5044