Crawfordsville Concrete is the concrete contractor Danville homeowners call for decorative concrete, driveways, and patios. Serving Hendricks County for over a decade, we handle decorative concrete, driveway building, and patio construction - with a crew that knows the clay soils and freeze-thaw cycles that work against concrete in central Indiana.

Danville homeowners near the historic district - where Queen Anne, Colonial Revival, and Craftsman homes are common - often want surfaces that fit the character of the neighborhood. We install decorative concrete for patios, walkways, and driveways that adds visual appeal without sacrificing the durability needed for central Indiana winters. See our decorative concrete service.
Many of the subdivisions that spread out from Danville in the 1990s and early 2000s now have driveways that are 20 to 30 years old - prime age for cracking and surface failure on Hendricks County clay soil. We replace worn driveways with new slabs built on compacted bases using mix designs rated for freeze-thaw exposure.
For Danville homeowners who want their patio or front walk to complement older home styles near the courthouse square, stamped concrete offers the look of stone or brick at a more manageable cost. We seal every stamped surface to protect the pattern and color through Indiana winters.
Danville sits close enough to Indianapolis that many residents work in the city and spend evenings at home. A well-built concrete patio gives you a low-maintenance outdoor space that holds up through the area's hot, humid summers and hard winters without rotting or splintering the way wood does.
The older streets near Danville's historic downtown core see heaved and broken sidewalks regularly after the spring thaw. Whether you need to address a town-flagged repair or want to replace a crumbling front walk before it becomes a liability, we handle permits and build replacements that stay level through future seasons.
Properties near wooded areas like Blanton Woods, and any Danville yard with a slope or drainage challenge, can see soil erosion worsen after spring storms. Concrete retaining walls hold slopes stable and keep topsoil where it belongs, especially on lots where the clay soil holds water after a heavy rain.
Danville sits in central Indiana, where winters bring hard freezes and repeated freeze-thaw cycles from roughly November through March. Water gets into small surface cracks in concrete, freezes, expands, and chips the slab apart from the inside - a process that turns minor surface wear into real structural damage over just a few seasons. The clay-heavy soils common across Hendricks County make this worse. Clay swells when wet in a rainy Indiana spring and shrinks when it dries out in summer, moving the ground under any slab that was not built on a properly compacted, well-drained base. A driveway or patio installed without accounting for this soil behavior will start showing problems within a few years regardless of how good the concrete itself was.
The property mix in Danville spans a wide range of ages and conditions. Homes near the historic district - Queen Anne and Craftsman bungalows on established lots close to the Hendricks County Courthouse - have original or early-replacement concrete that has seen 50 or more Indiana winters. The subdivisions that grew outward from town in the 1990s and 2000s now have driveways and flatwork reaching the age when freeze-thaw damage and clay soil movement start showing up regularly. Homeowners across both parts of town are dealing with the same underlying conditions, just at different stages of the process.
Our crew works throughout Danville regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. We pull permits through the Town of Danville for driveway and sidewalk work, and we know what the permitting process looks like locally. We have worked on older properties near the Hendricks County Courthouse square and in the newer subdivisions that have spread out along the edges of town over the past few decades.
US Highway 36 is the main east-west road through Danville, and Indiana State Road 39 runs north-south through town - between the two, they connect every part of the city. We know the neighborhoods off both corridors, from the streets near the historic Carnegie library building to the residential areas on the outer edges. The town maintains roughly 49 miles of public roadway, and the residential streets we work on branch off those two main corridors.
We serve Danville and the broader Hendricks County area. Homeowners in neighboring Brownsburg to the north and Greencastle to the southwest can reach us for the same concrete work - we cover both and can schedule efficiently across the area.
Reach us by phone or the contact form. We respond within 1 business day and schedule a free on-site visit at a time that works for you - no commitment required to get an estimate.
We come to your property, measure the area, and check base and drainage conditions - including any existing concrete that needs to come out. You receive a written quote with scope and cost clearly broken down so you can compare it against other bids honestly.
If a permit is required, we handle the application with the Town of Danville. Once approved, we remove old material, compact the base for Hendricks County clay soil, set forms, and pour on a scheduled day. You do not need to be present, but we confirm timing with you in advance.
Vehicle traffic should wait 5 to 7 days after the pour - longer in cooler weather. We walk the finished work with you before closing out the job and answer any questions about sealing and maintenance to protect the surface through Danville winters.
We serve Danville and all of Hendricks County. Describe your project and we will get back to you within 1 business day.
(765) 350-1779Danville is the county seat of Hendricks County, located about 20 miles west of Indianapolis along US Highway 36. The town has grown steadily as Hendricks County has attracted families looking for a quieter alternative to suburban Indianapolis, and it now has a population in the range of 10,000 to 15,000 residents. The downtown is built around the Hendricks County Courthouse, a Renaissance Revival limestone building completed in 1914 that anchors the central square. The surrounding streets include a National Register Historic District with 19th- and early 20th-century homes in Queen Anne, Colonial Revival, and Craftsman styles - a neighborhood that gives Danville much of its distinctive character. The Carnegie library building, opened in 1903, still stands and serves the local history and genealogy community.
Beyond the historic core, Danville's newer subdivisions stretch outward from the center of town, most built from the 1990s onward with attached garages, concrete driveways, and wood decks. Blanton Woods, a wooded natural area behind the Blanton House, offers trails and green space within the town limits. The mix of older historic homes and newer suburban construction means Danville has a wide range of concrete work at different stages of age and condition. We serve all of it, from the blocks near the courthouse to the subdivisions on the edge of town. Homeowners in nearby Brownsburg and Greencastle are also within our regular service area.
Beautiful concrete finishes that enhance any interior or exterior space.
Learn MoreStrong retaining walls that control erosion and grade your landscape.
Learn MoreLevel, durable concrete floors for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreCall us or send a message today. We serve all of Danville and Hendricks County with driveways, patios, and concrete flatwork built to hold up through Indiana winters.