Serving Crowley, TX and surrounding areas. (682) 247-0194
Crowley Concrete Polishing & Epoxy Flooring brings polished concrete, epoxy floor coatings, and garage floor systems to Burleson homeowners. We have spent years working on Johnson County slabs and understand what Blackland Prairie clay does to concrete when the rains come and go.

Burleson homeowners replacing carpet or tile on shifting clay-soil slabs are switching to polished concrete because it adds no height and handles minor foundation movement without cracking at grout lines. It is also easier to keep clean in a busy family household.
Burleson garages see a lot of use - from commutes down the Chisholm Trail Parkway to weekend projects and vehicle storage. An epoxy coating protects the builder-grade slab from oil, chemicals, and the abrasion that comes with daily driving in and out.
Most Burleson homes built in the 1990s and early 2000s have untreated garage slabs that have absorbed years of staining and surface wear. A full coating system restores the slab and seals it against the humidity swings that this part of Johnson County sees every year.
Driveways and patios on the newer, larger lots in south and east Burleson are more exposed to drainage issues and soil movement. When a slab develops surface cracks or spalling from that movement, resurfacing with a bonded overlay is often far more cost-effective than replacement.
Burleson driveways and concrete flatwork face a back-and-forth of heavy spring rain and prolonged summer drought. Sealing the surface creates a barrier against that moisture cycling and slows the surface breakdown that begins within a few years of installation if the concrete is left unprotected.
Newer Burleson subdivisions with open floor plans are a good match for stained concrete, which transforms a builder slab into a finished-looking surface with color and warmth. It is a long-term investment that holds up better in this climate than soft flooring materials.
Burleson sits on Blackland Prairie clay, and that soil type is the single biggest factor affecting concrete in this area. The clay swells every spring when the rains come in from the south, and then it contracts through July and August when temperatures regularly top 100 degrees and the ground dries out fast. That expansion-contraction cycle happens every year, and it puts real stress on every concrete slab, driveway, and patio in the city. A contractor who has not worked extensively on Johnson County soil will miss the signs of that movement and apply products or techniques that are not built for those conditions. Researchers at Texas A&M AgriLife Extension document this extensively as one of the most significant structural challenges for North Texas homeowners.
The housing stock in Burleson adds another layer of complexity. Homes from the 1990s and early 2000s are now between 15 and 35 years old, which is when original concrete surfaces start showing meaningful wear: pitting, staining, hairline cracks, and surface dusting. At the same time, newer subdivisions on the south and east sides of the city are bringing in larger lots with more concrete surface area - longer driveways, bigger patios, wider sidewalks - all subject to the same clay-soil movement. Whether the home is near Old Town Burleson or in a subdivision off Wilshire Boulevard, the underlying challenge is the same.
Our crew works throughout Burleson regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete flooring work here. We are familiar with the mix of housing types across the city - from the smaller, older homes near downtown along Ellison Street and the Old Town Burleson district, to the larger newer subdivisions that have grown up around Burleson Centennial High School on the south side of the city. Each part of town has its own typical slab age and soil exposure history, and that shapes what we recommend for every job.
We also work in the communities surrounding Burleson. Customers in Mansfield to the east are on similarly expansive clay, and we serve them using the same preparation standards we apply in Burleson. Our crews travel the Chisholm Trail Parkway corridor and the surface roads that connect the southern Johnson County communities, which keeps scheduling predictable and response times fast.
Burleson homeowners tend to do their homework before calling a contractor. That is a good thing. We welcome questions about what a job involves, what products we use, and how long results should last - and we give straight answers. If a slab has too much damage to coat well, we will tell you that rather than take on a job that will not hold up.
We respond to every message within one business day. Let us know the space, what you are hoping to accomplish, and a rough timeframe - that gives us what we need to set up the visit.
We come to your Burleson property, assess the slab condition, note any signs of clay-soil movement or moisture, and give you a written estimate that breaks down exactly what the job involves. No charge for the estimate, no obligation to proceed.
We grind or shot-blast the slab before applying any coating or polish - this step is not optional and it is what separates a floor that lasts from one that peels. Most residential jobs in Burleson are completed in one to two days depending on the space size.
Once the work is done, we walk you through the floor, answer any questions, and give you specific care guidance for the system installed. Coated floors are typically ready for foot traffic within 24 hours and vehicle traffic within 72 hours.
Burleson homeowners get a written estimate, plain-language explanation of the work, and no-pressure follow-up. Call us or submit the form and we will get back to you within one business day.
(682) 247-0194Burleson is a city in Johnson County, directly south of Fort Worth, with a population that has grown to around 50,000 residents. It has been one of the faster-growing cities in the Dallas-Fort Worth area over the past two decades, drawing families who want more space than the inner suburbs offer while staying connected to Fort Worth via the Chisholm Trail Parkway. The city has two distinct personalities: the older, tighter-knit streets around downtown and the Old Town Burleson district along Ellison Street, and the newer subdivisions expanding outward on the south and east sides with larger lots and newer homes. You can find census data and demographic details on Wikipedia's Burleson, Texas article.
The housing stock in Burleson is overwhelmingly single-family and owner-occupied, with most homes built on concrete slab foundations that are subject to the same clay-soil movement found throughout the Blackland Prairie region. The Burleson Independent School District serves the city and reflects its family-centered character. We serve Burleson homeowners alongside our customers in neighboring Crowley to the north and Mansfield to the northeast, making us a familiar presence across southern Johnson County and western Tarrant County.
Heavy-duty epoxy solutions built for commercial and industrial facilities.
Learn MoreFast-curing polyaspartic coatings for long-lasting floor protection.
Learn MoreChemical-resistant urethane cement flooring for demanding environments.
Learn MoreMoisture-resistant basement flooring solutions for comfort and longevity.
Learn MoreProfessional grinding and surface prep for lasting coating adhesion.
Learn MoreRestore worn concrete with decorative overlays and resurfacing.
Learn MoreSelf-leveling overlays that create perfectly flat, smooth surfaces.
Learn MoreSlip-resistant pool deck coatings that stand up to sun and water.
Learn MoreEfficient stripping and removal of old coatings and adhesives.
Learn MoreWe are scheduling Burleson jobs now. Call today or fill out the estimate form above and we will follow up within one business day.