
Advanced Seagoville Concrete is a concrete contractor serving DeSoto with decorative concrete, driveways, patios, and foundation work built for Dallas County clay. We have been active in this area since 2015 and respond to all inquiries within 1 business day.

DeSoto homeowners with established yards and patios often want an upgrade that holds up in the Texas heat without the upkeep of wood or pavers. Stamped patterns, staining, and exposed aggregate finishes all fall under our decorative concrete services, and we seal every finished surface to protect against UV damage and the moisture swings that come with Dallas County clay.
Many DeSoto driveways were poured 30 to 50 years ago when the neighborhoods were first developed, and the combination of age, clay soil movement, and mature tree roots has taken a toll. We remove failing slabs and pour replacements with the control joints and base compaction that give new concrete the best chance of lasting through decades of Dallas County wet-dry cycles.
DeSoto lots often have mature shade trees that make backyard patios genuinely comfortable for outdoor living outside of July and August. A concrete patio gives you a stable, low-maintenance surface that drains properly and does not shift the way brick or paver patios can when the clay soil moves.
Older DeSoto neighborhoods often have sidewalk panels that have heaved from tree roots or clay movement, creating trip hazards that the city may eventually require the homeowner to fix. We replace damaged sections and pour new runs sized and sloped to meet DeSoto standards, and we match the existing panel width and finish so repairs do not look patched.
New additions, detached garages, and accessory structures in DeSoto need slabs poured on properly prepared subgrade - especially here, where black clay soil requires extra compaction steps and moisture barriers before any concrete goes down. We handle the full process from grading through pour and finishing, and we pull the permit from the DeSoto building department.
Properties in DeSoto with sloped lots or areas where runoff from neighbors cuts across the yard benefit from retaining walls that hold soil in place through the spring storm season. Concrete walls outlast timber alternatives in this climate, handle heavy clay soil pressure without bowing, and do not require seasonal treatment to stay sound.
DeSoto sits in southern Dallas County on heavy expansive clay - what locals sometimes call black gumbo soil. This clay absorbs rainfall and swells, then dries out and contracts during summer. Homes built from the 1970s through the early 2000s sit on slabs that have been flexing with this cycle for decades, and the same movement affects every concrete surface on the property. A contractor who pours without accounting for this soil dynamic will have callbacks. One who accounts for it delivers work that holds its shape season after season.
The mature tree canopy across most DeSoto neighborhoods adds another layer of complexity. Large oaks and pecans that were planted when homes were new are now established enough to push roots under driveways, sidewalks, and even slabs. The combination of root pressure and clay movement means some concrete issues require more than a surface patch - the subgrade situation has to be addressed before a new pour is worth the investment. The city also enforces its own building code through the DeSoto development services department, so permits and inspections stay within city jurisdiction rather than the county.
Our crew works throughout DeSoto regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete contractor work here. We pull permits through the DeSoto building department at City Hall on Pleasant Run Road and know which types of projects need review versus those that can proceed without a permit under the city code. The mostly single-family residential character of DeSoto means our work here is primarily homeowner-focused - driveways, patios, sidewalks, and additions - along with commercial flatwork and parking lot work along the Hampton Road and Westmoreland Road corridors.
Interstate 35E along the western edge and US-67 to the southeast give us fast access to any part of DeSoto without fighting surface street delays. The city sits squarely in the southern Dallas County cluster of communities, and we regularly work across the whole area. Neighboring Duncanville to the north and Lancaster to the east are both in our regular rotation, and we schedule across all three without added fees.
Call us directly or submit the online form and we will respond within 1 business day. Give us a brief description of the project - driveway, patio, decorative finish, or something else - and we set up an on-site appointment at a time that works.
We come to the property, look at the existing conditions - soil, grade, drainage, any root or tree proximity issues - and give you a written estimate with a clear price before any work starts. There is no cost for the estimate and no obligation to hire us.
If the project requires a permit through DeSoto, we handle that step before putting you on the schedule. You do not need to be present for permit filing, and we keep you updated on timing. Once approved, we confirm your work date and show up as scheduled.
Our crew handles prep, forming, pouring, and finishing in one coordinated process. We clean up the site before we leave and walk you through cure time and any care instructions specific to your project and the DeSoto climate.
We serve DeSoto and the surrounding area. No obligation - just a straight answer on what the job costs and how long it takes.
(469) 848-8587DeSoto is a mid-sized suburb in southern Dallas County, covering roughly 22 square miles between Cedar Hill to the west and Duncanville to the north. The city grew through the latter half of the 20th century and is now largely built out, with a population of around 55,000 to 60,000 people. Most of the housing stock is single-family detached homes on modest suburban lots - brick veneer over wood framing on slab foundations - built primarily between the 1970s and the early 2000s. The city centers around DeSoto Town Center near the Pleasant Run Road and Hampton Road intersection, where City Hall and civic facilities are located.
The commercial corridors along Hampton Road and Westmoreland Road carry retail, restaurants, and light commercial uses that have anchored the local economy for decades. Established tree canopy throughout the residential neighborhoods reflects how long these streets have been built out. The DeSoto ISD serves the community and is a strong part of local identity. DeSoto neighbors several southwest Dallas County communities, and we work across all of them - Duncanville just to the north and Hutchins to the northeast are two of the closest.
Get a durable, professionally poured concrete driveway built to last.
Learn MoreAdd texture and style to any surface with decorative stamped concrete.
Learn MoreSafe, smooth, and code-compliant concrete sidewalks installed right.
Learn MoreBeautiful decorative finishes that enhance the look of any concrete surface.
Learn MoreSolid concrete retaining walls that hold soil and prevent erosion.
Learn MoreLevel, polished concrete floors installed for homes and businesses.
Learn MoreSlip-resistant, attractive concrete pool decks designed for outdoor use.
Learn MoreProperly graded concrete slab foundations for structures of all sizes.
Learn MoreExpert concrete foundation installation to support your building long-term.
Learn MoreCommercial concrete parking lots built for heavy traffic and durability.
Learn MoreRestore and level settling foundations with professional concrete raising.
Learn MoreClean, precise concrete cutting for repairs, expansions, and modifications.
Learn MoreCall us today or submit your request online. We serve all of DeSoto and respond within 1 business day - no runaround, no vague quotes.