
Complete Texarkana Concrete is a concrete contractor serving Nash, TX with driveways, slab foundations, and retaining walls built for Bowie County conditions. We have served the Nash and Texarkana area since 2015 and respond to new inquiries within one business day.

Many Nash homes were built in the 1960s through 1980s, and the original driveways on those properties are showing their age - cracked and sunken from decades of clay soil movement. We build concrete driveways with proper base preparation that handles the shrink-swell soil common across Bowie County.
Slab-on-grade construction is the standard for new residential and light commercial building in Nash. On Bowie County clay soils, getting the slab depth, reinforcement, and control joint layout right from the start is what separates a foundation that lasts from one that shifts and cracks early.
Nash properties with sloped lots or drainage challenges need retaining walls that hold up to the lateral pressure of saturated clay after a heavy East Texas rain. Concrete walls outlast block or timber alternatives on this type of soil, and they do not require the same level of ongoing maintenance.
Nash residents take advantage of a long outdoor season, and a solid concrete patio holds up through that extended use better than wood decking or pavers on clay soil. We grade and form patios so water moves away from the house, not toward the foundation.
Older Nash neighborhoods near Kings Highway and US 82 often have sidewalks that have heaved or cracked from tree roots and clay movement. We replace damaged sections or pour new walks built to meet Bowie County and city standards for thickness and joint placement.
Entry steps on Nash homes take a beating from summer heat and the occasional hard freeze that works moisture into hairline cracks. Concrete steps built with the correct footing depth stay stable through those temperature swings and do not shift the way poorly anchored steps do on clay soil.
Nash sits on the same Bowie County clay soils that run across the northeastern corner of Texas. That clay swells during wet stretches and shrinks back down during the dry heat of summer. Over years, that repeated movement puts stress on every concrete surface on a property - driveways crack from the middle out, sidewalks heave where roots meet clay, and slabs shift in ways that show up as sticking doors and diagonal wall cracks inside the house. A contractor who pours without addressing the base conditions is setting up a surface that starts failing in just a few years. Doing it right means excavating deep enough, compacting the subgrade thoroughly, and placing reinforcement and control joints where the soil movement is most likely to concentrate stress.
The climate adds pressure on top of the soil challenge. Nash gets roughly 45 to 50 inches of rainfall per year, much of it in fast-moving spring thunderstorms that saturate clay quickly and test drainage grading on every slab and driveway. Summers are long and consistently hot, which accelerates surface curing if a contractor is not taking the right steps during a pour. The occasional hard freeze in winter can force moisture into surface cracks and widen them before spring arrives. These are not one-time events - they are the annual pattern in this part of East Texas, and they call for concrete work that accounts for all of it from the planning stage forward.
Our crew works throughout Nash regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. Nash is a compact city - about 3.4 square miles - bordered by Texarkana to the north and east and Wake Village to the south, which means we can reach any address in town quickly from our regular routes. The residential streets off Kings Highway (FM 989) and US 82 are where most of our Nash work takes place - single-family homes on modest lots where the driveway or patio has been in place since the 1970s or 1980s and is well past its service life. We also handle work near Nash Business Park for light commercial concrete needs.
Nash homeowners tend to be practical about spending, and we match that approach with straightforward quotes and no added fees after the job starts. If you are near I-30 at Exit 218, along New Boston Road, or tucked into one of Nash's residential neighborhoods, we know how to find you and we show up on time. We also serve the neighboring community of Wake Village just to the south, and our broader territory includes Texarkana, TX and all surrounding Bowie County communities.
Call or submit the contact form and we reply within one business day. We schedule a free on-site visit at a time that works for you - no obligation and no pressure to commit on the spot.
We look at the site, assess the soil and drainage conditions, and give you a written estimate with a real number - not a range you will find out later was optimistic. We cover scope, materials, timeline, and what base prep is needed for your specific lot.
We handle any required permits and schedule the crew. Most residential Nash jobs are completed in one to three working days. You do not need to be present for the entire pour, but we keep you informed as the work progresses.
After the pour we walk you through the curing timeline - typically 24 to 48 hours before foot traffic and up to seven days before vehicle use. We clean up the site before we leave, and you have a direct number to reach us if anything comes up afterward.
We serve Nash and all of Bowie County. No obligation, no pressure - just a straight answer on what your project will cost.
(430) 278-0016Nash is a small city in Bowie County covering about 3.4 square miles, with a population of roughly 3,800 to 4,000 residents. It was incorporated in 1959 and grew steadily through the 1960s and 1970s as a bedroom community for Texarkana. Most of the housing stock is single-family homes built between the 1960s and 1990s - brick veneer and wood-frame construction on modest lots. The city is served by the Texarkana Independent School District, with Nash Elementary as the neighborhood school. The Nash Business Park along the city's main corridors provides local industrial and light commercial employment. Many residents also have ties to Red River Army Depot and the broader Texarkana industrial base just a few miles away.
Interstate 30 runs along Nash's northern edge, with access at Exit 218. US Route 82 (New Boston Road) and Farm to Market Road 989 (Kings Highway) cross through the heart of the city and connect Nash to Texarkana and points west. For information about the city, you can visit the City of Nash official website. Nash sits directly between Texarkana to the north and east and Wake Village to the south - two communities we also serve regularly. Homeowners across Nash deal with the same clay soil movement and seasonal weather patterns as the broader Texarkana metro, and the homes here are at the age where driveways, patios, and exterior concrete surfaces often need meaningful attention rather than patch repairs.
Custom patios that expand your outdoor living space beautifully.
Learn MoreRetaining walls that hold soil and add structure to your property.
Learn MoreLevel, finished concrete floors for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreReinforced slab foundations engineered for lasting structural support.
Learn MoreCommercial parking lots built for heavy traffic and longevity.
Learn MoreCall Complete Texarkana Concrete today or submit a request online - we respond within one business day and provide free on-site estimates with no obligation.