
Custom Greenville Concrete Company handles concrete contracting in Sachse, TX, including stamped concrete, driveway building, and patio construction, with crews experienced on both sides of the Dallas-Collin County line and serving the area since 2019.
Custom Greenville Concrete Company handles concrete contracting in Sachse, TX, including stamped concrete, driveway building, and patio construction, with crews experienced on both sides of the Dallas-Collin County line and serving the area since 2019.

Sachse homeowners are upgrading aging driveways and patios that date from the city's growth period in the 1990s and 2000s, and stamped concrete gives those surfaces a fresh look that plain replacement slabs cannot offer. Our stamped concrete services use patterns and sealers rated for North Texas heat and the clay soil movement that affects every property in this part of the metro.
Concrete driveways throughout Sachse are now 20 to 30 years old in many neighborhoods, and the Blackland clay soil has been working on them every season since they were poured. We replace driveways with properly reinforced slabs and the base preparation that the soil conditions here actually require, not just what a quick job calls for.
Outdoor living is a priority for Sachse homeowners, and a concrete patio built on properly prepared ground will stay level and usable far longer than a patio poured without accounting for the clay soil underneath. We size and finish patios to fit the typical suburban lots in Sachse neighborhoods and the outdoor furniture and structures homeowners typically place on them.
Sidewalk panels in Sachse crack and lift as the clay soil moves with moisture and drought cycles, and damaged sections can create trip hazards. We replace lifted or broken panels and match the existing grade, and we handle any coordination with the city for work near the public right-of-way.
Additions, detached garages, and outbuildings in Sachse go on concrete slabs, and getting the base right matters more here than in areas with stable soil. We account for the expansive clay conditions found throughout this part of Dallas and Collin counties when we size and reinforce any new slab we pour.
Heavy spring rain events in Sachse push water across sloped lots and can undermine driveways and foundations over time. A concrete retaining wall manages that water flow and keeps soil in place, and it stays put in the expansive clay that would shift a lighter block wall or timber structure within a few seasons.
Sachse grew quickly during a building boom that ran from the early 1990s through the 2010s, and most of the city's housing stock dates from that period. Those homes were built on the heavy Blackland Prairie clay soil that covers this part of north Texas, and the driveways, sidewalks, and patios poured during construction are now 20 to 30 years old. The clay soil never really stops moving - it swells during the wet months and shrinks when drought hits, and that cycle repeats every year. By now, most original concrete surfaces on Sachse properties have accumulated enough stress to show real cracking and uneven panels.
Sachse also sits in one of the most active severe weather corridors in the country. Spring thunderstorms can drop large hail in minutes, which damages decorative and stamped concrete surfaces more than plain finishes. Summer heat regularly exceeds 95 degrees Fahrenheit and fades concrete colorants faster than in cooler climates. The county-line split adds a practical wrinkle: homes on the Dallas County side of Sachse and homes on the Collin County side may have different permit requirements, different tax records, and occasionally different building code interpretations. A contractor who works both sides of the city needs to know which rules apply to which address.
Our crew works throughout Sachse regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. Because Sachse straddles the Dallas and Collin county lines, we check the specific address before every project to confirm which permit jurisdiction applies - a detail that matters when pulling permits through the City of Sachse versus the applicable county office. Highway 78 is the main road through the city and how we reach most job sites, with the George Bush Turnpike along the southern edge giving us quick access from the broader Dallas metro.
The neighborhoods in Sachse branch off Highway 78 to the east and west, and most of the residential work we do here is in those post-1990s subdivisions where the original concrete is aging out. We also serve Wylie directly to the north, where the soil conditions are essentially the same Blackland clay, and Garland to the south and west. If you are on the Sachse side of any of those borders, we are already familiar with your neighborhood.
Call or fill out the contact form and tell us what you need - stamped patio, driveway replacement, sidewalk repair, or something else. We respond within one business day to confirm the details and set up the site visit.
We come to your Sachse property, look at the existing conditions and soil, and give you a written estimate that covers the full scope. Cost anxiety is common with concrete jobs - we address it upfront so there are no surprises when the invoice arrives.
If the project requires a permit - whether through the City of Sachse or the applicable county - we handle the application and inspection coordination. We confirm your pour date once permits clear and materials are ready.
We complete the work, finish and seal the surface, and clean up before leaving your property. Before the crew leaves, we walk you through the cure timeline and any maintenance steps specific to the finish you chose.
We cover all of Sachse - both the Dallas County side and the Collin County side. No obligation, just a clear estimate on what your project needs and what it will cost.
(903) 303-6621Sachse is a city of roughly 25,000 to 35,000 residents located about 20 miles northeast of downtown Dallas, split between Dallas and Collin counties. It grew from a small farming community into a busy residential suburb over the past three decades, with most of the housing stock built during the expansion years of the 1990s and 2000s. The city is predominantly single-family homes on suburban lots with brick veneer exteriors, which is the standard build style for this part of the Dallas metro. Learn more at the City of Sachse official website.
Highway 78 runs through the center of Sachse and connects the city to Garland to the south and to Wylie to the north. The George Bush Turnpike runs along the southern edge of the area and gives residents quick access to the broader DFW metro. The county-line split means Sachse homeowners on the Dallas County side deal with Garland ISD, while those on the Collin County side fall under Wylie ISD - a detail that also affects permit jurisdictions for home improvement projects. We work both sides and know which process applies where.
Get a durable, professionally poured concrete driveway built to last.
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Learn MoreCall us or submit the contact form for a free estimate. We work across all of Sachse and know the area well - on both sides of the county line.