Where Hamilton County turns agricultural and industrial
Sheridan's commercial profile is different from the county's southern suburbs — more working facilities, more heavy-duty concrete, and an older downtown core. Ag operations, light-industrial sites, and the businesses along SR-38 and SR-47 need concrete that handles real load: equipment and truck traffic, loading and service areas, and pavement that takes a beating. That's squarely in our wheelhouse.
At the same time, Sheridan's historic downtown carries the older, heavily-used pedestrian concrete typical of an established Main Street, which needs careful repair to stay safe and presentable.
Heavy-duty concrete for working facilities
For Sheridan's ag and industrial properties, the scope leans toward the demanding end: slab and pavement repair built for equipment and truck loads, loading and service-area concrete, dumpster and equipment pads sized for the real duty cycle, and curb and drainage work. We engineer these repairs for the loads they actually carry, not for a light-commercial assumption that fails in a season.
An older downtown that needs a careful hand
Downtown Sheridan's sidewalks, entrances, and steps have weathered decades of Indiana winters, and they carry steady pedestrian traffic through an established commercial district. We repair that older pedestrian concrete with attention to keeping the district open and its character intact — flush, safe transitions and trip-hazard control on long-service surfaces.
Far corner of the county, same standard
Sheridan's distance from the county's center doesn't change how we work it. Properties there get the same assessment, line-item proposal, phased scheduling, and documentation as anywhere — with scheduling that accounts for the longer reach and the rhythms of a working, agricultural community.