
Rogers Concrete Company serves Lowell, AR homeowners with garage floors, driveways, patios, and foundation work built for Benton County clay soil - with a 1 business day response time and free on-site estimates.

Most Lowell homes were built in the 1990s and 2000s, which means a lot of garage floors are now 25 to 35 years old and starting to show cracks, spalling, and uneven surfaces from years of clay soil movement underneath. Our garage floor concrete service starts with proper base compaction and uses the right slab thickness for Northwest Arkansas soil conditions, so your new floor stays level and crack-free through seasonal ground movement.
Lowell driveways that went in during the housing boom of the 2000s are now aging fast. The clay soil under many of these suburban lots was not always prepped to the depth needed for long-term slab stability. We rebuild driveways from the ground up with a compacted gravel base designed to absorb the seasonal swelling and shrinking that cracks concrete in this part of Arkansas.
Lowell backyards are modest in size, which makes a well-built concrete patio a practical investment. Low spots in the yard and clay-heavy soil that drains slowly mean grading and slope matter as much as the concrete mix. We build patios that drain away from the house and stay level through wet Arkansas springs.
Slab-on-grade construction is the standard in Lowell and throughout Benton County. When you are building an addition, workshop, or new structure, a properly designed slab that accounts for local soil behavior is the starting point for everything else. We build slabs with reinforcement and base depth matched to the ground conditions on your specific lot.
Lowell is a city where most people get around by car, but safe, level walkways from the driveway to the front door and around the home matter for daily use and curb appeal. We build sidewalks and connecting paths with proper drainage built in so they do not heave or settle after a few wet seasons.
Lowell grew fast. The city roughly doubled in size between 2000 and 2020, and most of that growth happened quickly - which means a lot of homes were built under the pressure of rapid development. Fast construction sometimes means base prep under driveways and garage floors was done at minimum standard rather than what the local soil actually requires. Benton County clay soil swells significantly when it absorbs water and shrinks back down during dry periods. A concrete slab that was poured over a thin or poorly compacted base will follow that movement, and the cracks and unlevel surfaces homeowners see today are usually the result of decisions made 15 to 25 years ago.
Lowell winters bring enough freeze-thaw cycles to worsen any crack that already exists. Water gets into a small crack during a wet spell, freezes and expands when temperatures drop, and the crack widens. Over several winters, what started as a hairline becomes a trip hazard or a structural concern. The heavy spring rainfall that Northwest Arkansas sees - around 47 inches of rain per year concentrated in March through May - adds drainage pressure around slabs and foundations. A contractor who builds for these conditions uses thicker slabs, deeper gravel bases, and proper drainage grading from the start.
We pull permits directly from the City of Lowell for all work that requires one, including driveway approaches that connect to a public street. Knowing what each municipality requires - and how Lowell's process differs from Rogers or Springdale - keeps projects on track without delays from permit corrections.
Lowell sits right along the I-49 corridor between Rogers to the north and Springdale to the south. Most of the residential neighborhoods here are classic suburban - single-family homes on quarter-acre lots with attached two-car garages, concrete driveways, and backyard patios. The terrain is mostly flat to gently rolling, which helps drainage compared to some hillier parts of Benton County, but low spots in yards near creek beds can still collect water during heavy spring rains. We factor that into how we grade concrete surfaces on any project.
We also work regularly in neighboring Springdale, where similar soil and growth conditions produce the same range of concrete repair and installation needs. If your project spans both cities or you are a property manager working in both markets, we can handle it with one crew and one contact.
We respond within 1 business day. Most concrete projects in Lowell require a site visit before we can give you an accurate number - we do not quote driveways or garage floors over the phone without seeing the actual condition of the base and existing concrete.
We come to your property, look at the existing slab or grade, measure the area, and discuss your options. You get a written estimate that covers base prep, demolition if needed, the pour, finishing, and cleanup. No vague line items after the work starts.
We handle permitting through the City of Lowell for any project that requires it. Once the permit is approved, we give you a confirmed start date. In peak season - spring and early fall - booking two to three weeks ahead is realistic.
We handle all prep, forming, the pour, finishing, and cleanup. Before we leave, we walk you through cure time requirements - keep vehicles off a new garage floor or driveway for seven full days. Permitted work gets a city inspection and we are there for it.
We serve Lowell homeowners and respond within 1 business day. Free on-site estimates - no phone quotes on flatwork or foundations.
(479) 413-0232Lowell is a city in Benton County with a population of around 10,000 - a number that roughly doubled between 2000 and 2020. It sits directly along the I-49 corridor, with Rogers to the north and Springdale to the south, putting Lowell residents close to the major employers and amenities of the broader Northwest Arkansas metro area. The city has a small-town feel despite its proximity to bigger cities, and most neighborhoods are made up of owner-occupied single-family homes on suburban lots. Lowell City Park serves as the community anchor for local families, and the city has invested in parks and recreation to keep pace with its growing population.
The housing stock in Lowell skews newer compared to Rogers or Fayetteville, with most homes built after 1990. That wave of 1990s and 2000s construction means a lot of driveways, garage floors, and flatwork are now old enough to need serious attention. Neighboring Rogers to the north shares many of the same housing characteristics and soil conditions, and homeowners in both cities often deal with the same concrete maintenance needs.
Durable concrete driveways designed and poured to last for decades.
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Learn moreProperly sized and poured footings that anchor structures to stable ground.
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Call Rogers Concrete Company today for a free on-site estimate - spring is the busiest season, and booking ahead means a faster start date for your project.