Lakeside, small-town commercial concrete
Cicero's commercial base is smaller and more seasonal than the county's southern cities, but the concrete works just as hard. Recreation-area retail and services around Morse Reservoir, the businesses along SR-19, and downtown Cicero all depend on safe, presentable sidewalks, parking, and entrances — and they see the same central-Indiana winters as everywhere else, just with a lake's worth of moisture nearby.
We bring the full commercial scope north to Cicero: sidewalk and entrance repair, parking and apron work, curbs, and ADA access — scoped and documented the same way regardless of how far up the county a property sits.
The lake-community HOAs around Morse Reservoir
A distinctive feature of the Cicero market is the cluster of lake and residential-adjacent community associations around Morse Reservoir, many with extensive common-area concrete — shared walks, clubhouse and amenity entrances, and parking. Those associations face the same challenge as any HOA: a large concrete footprint, a reserve budget, and resident liability. We handle them as documented, phased programs a board can budget, the same way we do for HOAs countywide.
Why Cicero concrete fails
The drivers are the central-Indiana standards — freeze-thaw cycling and shrink-swell clay soils that heave and settle panels, plus winter de-icing that scales surfaces at entrances. Lake-area properties can see concentrated moisture and drainage challenges near the water, which makes proper grading and drainage correction especially important so repairs hold rather than re-settling.
Worth the drive, scheduled to the local pace
Being at the north end of the county doesn't mean second-tier service. Cicero properties get the same on-site assessment, line-item proposal, phased scheduling, and closeout documentation as anywhere we work — scheduled considerately around a smaller-town, often seasonal, business rhythm.