
Atascocita Concrete Company serves Conroe, TX with slab foundation building, concrete driveways, and flatwork - engineered for the clay soil and rainfall conditions that affect every property in Montgomery County. We have served the greater Houston north corridor since 2024 and handle Conroe city permitting on every project.

Conroe sits on Montgomery County clay - the same expansive soil type that makes slab foundations across the Houston region prone to movement, cracking, and uneven settling. New construction in Conroe requires a slab design that accounts for this soil, with post-tension reinforcement and drainage slope engineered for the wet-dry cycles here. Our slab foundation building service starts with a soil-informed design, not a generic pour.
Conroe driveways face pressure from two directions: clay soil movement from below and tree root intrusion from the wooded lots that are common throughout Montgomery County. We replace and install driveways built with properly compacted bases, control joints spaced to manage future movement, and drainage grades that keep water moving toward the street instead of toward your garage.
Outdoor living is practical in Conroe for most of the year, and many homeowners here use patios and covered slabs as true extensions of their living space. We pour patios designed to drain away from home foundations - a real concern in an area that averages 50 inches of rain annually - with stamped or plain finishes suited to the wooded, residential character of Conroe lots.
Properties on Conroe's hillier terrain and wooded lots deal with slope erosion and soil runoff that flat suburban lots never encounter. Concrete retaining walls hold back saturated soil, define the usable edge of a yard, and direct drainage away from structures - built for the clay soil conditions that make retained embankments here more challenging than in sandier regions.
Outbuildings, additions, and freestanding structures in Conroe need footings designed for the same clay soil movement that affects every other slab in this area. Whether it is a detached garage, a covered porch addition, or a workshop, we pour footings with the depth and reinforcement that Montgomery County soil conditions require to stay stable through seasonal ground movement.
Sidewalks in Conroe's older downtown neighborhoods and established subdivisions frequently show signs of root damage and soil heave - both are common in areas with large pine and oak trees and active clay. We install and replace sidewalks with properly spaced control joints and graded drainage, built to handle the combination of tree roots and seasonal ground movement that makes concrete maintenance a regular part of ownership in this area.
Conroe's growth from under 40,000 people in 2000 to over 100,000 today means the city has an unusually wide range of housing ages. Neighborhoods near downtown include homes from the early 1900s with pier-and-beam foundations and wood siding that have been through decades of Montgomery County weather. On the city's expanding edges, newer tract subdivisions built fast during the growth boom are starting to hit the 15- to 20-year mark - the age when original concrete flatwork typically needs evaluation. The clay soil throughout this area does not care whether the slab is 10 years old or 50: it will keep moving with every rain and every dry spell, and concrete that was not built to handle that movement will show it.
Conroe also averages about 50 inches of rain per year, and flash flooding is a real concern after tropical storms and heavy thunderstorms - Hurricane Harvey in 2017 caused significant flooding across Montgomery County. That rainfall means drainage design is not a formality on any concrete job here: a driveway, patio, or foundation poured without proper slope and drainage planning will have water working against it from the first heavy rain. Homes near Lake Conroe face additional moisture exposure from the lake environment, and wooded lots throughout the county add tree root pressure that accelerates surface cracking in ways that bare suburban lots do not.
Conroe is the county seat of Montgomery County and an incorporated city, which means permits are handled through the City of Conroe's Building Inspection department rather than a county office - a common source of confusion for homeowners and contractors more familiar with unincorporated Harris County processes. We pull from Conroe's permit office regularly and know which project types require pre-pour inspections and how the city's review timeline affects job scheduling.
The city divides into distinct zones that shape what we see on each job: the older downtown core near the Crighton Theatre has aging concrete and pier-and-beam foundations that need careful assessment before any adjacent work is started. Newer subdivisions on the north and east sides - many built during Conroe's rapid growth phase - have tract homes on slab foundations that are entering their first major maintenance cycle. Near Lake Conroe, lakefront and near-water lots add soil saturation and drainage complexity that inland properties do not face. Interstate 45 runs through the center of the city and is our primary access corridor when working across different parts of Conroe.
We also serve Atascocita, TX, which shares the same clay soil profile and heavy annual rainfall that define concrete work throughout this region. Our crews work the full corridor from Conroe south through The Woodlands and into the Lake Houston area, so we carry consistent knowledge of Montgomery and Harris County conditions across every job.
We respond within 1 business day and schedule a free on-site visit. For slab foundations, we will ask about any soil reports or engineering documentation for the lot before we arrive so we can prepare the right questions.
We assess the soil, drainage, and site access before putting numbers to paper. For foundation work, our estimate reflects an engineer-reviewed design - because Conroe clay requires soil-specific reinforcement, not a standard pour. You will see every cost line itemized before any work is agreed to.
We handle the permit application with the City of Conroe Building Inspection department. For foundation pours, a city inspector will visit before the pour to verify forms and reinforcement - we schedule that inspection into the project timeline so it does not cause delays.
In Conroe summers, our crew schedules pours for early morning to avoid peak heat and uses curing compounds to protect the surface. You can walk on the concrete within 48 hours and use it for vehicles after seven days. We do a final walkthrough before the job is closed out.
We serve Conroe homeowners from the neighborhoods near downtown to the subdivisions along Lake Conroe and the newer communities on the city's growing edges. Call us or send a message and we will get back to you within 1 business day.
(832) 849-4374Conroe is the county seat of Montgomery County and one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States, expanding from around 36,000 residents in 2000 to over 100,000 today. The city sits about 40 miles north of downtown Houston along Interstate 45, and its growth reflects the broader Houston metropolitan expansion northward. That rapid growth produced a wide range of housing stock - older neighborhoods near downtown with homes dating to the early 1900s, established postwar subdivisions from the 1950s through 1970s, and large master-planned communities built in the 2000s and 2010s with hundreds of homes each. Most Conroe residents are owner-occupants who chose the city for more space and lower cost of living relative to inner Houston, and they invest in maintaining their properties over the long term.
Two of the most recognized landmarks in the Conroe area are Lake Conroe, a 21,000-acre reservoir just west of the city that draws lakefront and near-water residential development, and the Montgomery County Fairgrounds, home to one of the region's largest annual events. Many properties near the lake face extra wear from humidity and moisture exposure that inland lots in the same city do not deal with. The city's older core near downtown includes wooded residential streets where tree root pressure on driveways and walkways is a consistent maintenance issue. Neighboring The Woodlands lies just south of Conroe and is one of the most established master-planned communities in the entire Houston metro, while Atascocita sits to the southeast and shares the same regional clay soil and rainfall conditions.
Durable concrete driveways built to handle Texas weather and daily vehicle traffic.
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Call Atascocita Concrete Company or send us a message. We serve all of Conroe, from the downtown neighborhoods and Lake Conroe properties to the newest subdivisions on the city's edges.