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Send the slab details for a practical concrete lifting project conversation.

Use the form to describe the slab in the same way you would point it out in person: where it is, what changed, what happens after rain, and what blocks access.

After the details are sent, the next step is a practical conversation about the slab type, visible movement, access, and whether the inquiry sounds like a lifting fit.

What to include

  • The slab type and exact location
  • Whether the issue is a low spot, raised edge, gap, or trip hazard
  • What happens after rain or irrigation
  • Whether cracks, hollow sounds, or loose pieces are present
  • Access notes: gates, screens, pets, vehicles, tenants, furniture

Keep the request focused on flatwork lifting and leveling details. If the issue involves a building foundation, active washout, or another specialty, that should be identified before the inquiry is treated like routine slab lifting.

This form does not promise a price, appointment, result, or provider availability. A slab reviewer should confirm slab type, access, cause clues, and whether lifting is the right scope.

Send details like these before the project conversation

Uneven driveway slab prepared for a concrete lifting project in Daytona Beach
Driveway settlement exampleA plain description of the driveway panel, nearby joint, and visible low edge is enough to start the scope conversation.
Pool deck slab detail prepared for a concrete lifting project in Volusia County
Pool deck contextPool deck, screen, drain, and access details should be described before a project conversation gets specific.
Unbranded concrete lifting setup context near a Daytona driveway slab
Setup and access contextEquipment-adjacent details help explain why gates, hoses, vehicles, and work-area access matter.