Access is the whole point
Medical properties serve exactly the population most affected by bad concrete — patients with limited mobility, the elderly, and people arriving in pain or distraction. A heaved sidewalk panel, a ponding entrance, or a too-steep ramp is not just a liability here; it's a barrier to care and a fall risk for the people least able to absorb one. The concrete that connects parking, drop-off, and entrance has to be flawless.
We treat medical access concrete with that standard: flush, stable, well-drained surfaces and accessible routes that work for every patient, every day.
ADA compliance, measured and documented
Healthcare properties draw scrutiny on accessibility, and the deficiencies are the measurable ones — ramp running slopes, cross-slopes that pull a wheelchair sideways, undersized landings, and missing or worn detectable warnings. We measure these against the standard, correct the concrete to bring them into conformance, and document the verified result, so the facility has evidence of good-faith compliance. A full legal determination belongs with your counsel or an accessibility specialist; our job is to make the concrete conform and prove it.
Repaired around a facility that never really closes
Medical facilities run long hours and can't reroute patients through a construction zone. We keep accessible patient entrances and routes open throughout the work, phase around clinic hours and patient flow, and keep the site clean and dust-controlled. Where an entrance must be worked, we provide a compliant temporary accessible route rather than simply closing it.
Where medical concrete needs the most attention
The pressure points are the patient-facing ones: drop-off and loading aprons at the entrance, the accessible parking and access aisles, the entrance walks and any steps or ramps, and the transitions where they all meet. These see the heaviest mobility-device traffic and the most scrutiny, so they are where we focus the repair and the compliance work.