Make your concrete look new again.
Five-plus year old stamped, exposed or patterned concrete does not need to be replaced — it needs to be refreshed. A deep clean, a fresh coat of sealer and a few minor repairs will bring the colour, the wet-look and the protection back. We have been doing it on Edmonton driveways and patios for 30 years.
Three steps. One visit.
Most refreshers are wrapped up in a single day. We arrive in the morning, walk the slab with you, and leave it looking the way it did the day it was poured.
Pressure Wash
A proper deep clean — not a quick rinse. We lift years of road grime, salt residue, mildew and old sealer haze so the surface is ready to take a new coat.
Reseal
Two coats of UV-stable sealer matched to your finish. Restores colour depth on stamped and exposed work, brings the wet-look back, and protects through another Alberta winter.
Touch-up Repair
Hairline cracks chased and filled, chipped edges patched, faded colour spot-repaired. Small fixes done at the same visit so the whole slab reads as one again.
Six signs your concrete is asking for it.
Decorative concrete needs a reseal every two to three years. If yours has not been touched in five or more, you will probably notice a few of these. None of them mean the slab is bad — they mean the protection has worn off and it is time for a refresh.
- Colour has faded or gone chalky on stamped or exposed surfaces
- Water no longer beads on the surface — it soaks in
- Hairline cracks starting to show along control joints or edges
- Surface looks dull, dry or grey instead of rich and finished
- Salt or de-icer marks that will not wash off
- White haze, pet stains or oil spots that have set into the concrete
Honest, on-site pricing.
The Spring Refresher starts at $299 for the base reseal package on smaller driveways and patios — roughly 400 square feet or under, in good condition.
Anything bigger or in rougher shape gets a custom quote on-site. Square footage, surface condition, finish type, access and the state of the existing sealer all change the number, and we would rather walk it with you and give you a real price than guess.
The on-site assessment is free and there is no obligation.
The damaged-slab work other crews turn down.
Most concrete contractors only want to pour new slabs. Repair work is slow, fussy, and the colour and pattern matching is hard. After 30 years, Dean has poured enough decorative concrete to know how to put it back together when it goes wrong.
Touch-ups on stamped colour. Hairline crack repair. Spalling and edge restoration. Spot patches that blend into the surrounding pattern instead of standing out. Surface restoration on slabs that look written off but still have a lot of life in them.
If another contractor told you the only option is to tear it out and start over, get a second opinion from us before you do.
Get your refresher assessment.
Pick a time that works, or grab the phone — Dean will walk the slab with you and give you a straight answer.

