
Total Marshall Concrete serves Hallsville with concrete patios, driveways, sidewalks, and foundations built for Harrison County conditions. We have been working East Texas soil since 2015, and we know what it takes to pour concrete that holds up here. Every project starts with a free on-site estimate.

Hallsville homeowners have been investing in outdoor living space as the city has grown, and the back yards of both older in-town homes and newer subdivision builds are well suited for a poured concrete surface. A properly built concrete patio on Harrison County clay requires a compacted gravel base and control joints to handle the seasonal ground movement that would otherwise crack an unsupported slab within a few years.
Hallsville is a growing bedroom community, and the mix of older homes near the town center and newer subdivisions on the edges means you find both tired original driveways and first-time concrete installs on recently developed lots. East Texas pine trees drop debris year-round and their roots can work into unprepared sub-bases - proper depth and base compaction protects the surface from both.
Older residential streets in Hallsville have sidewalks that have shifted and cracked over many years of Harrison County clay movement. Replacing them with properly jointed concrete removes tripping hazards and is often required by the city when a property's frontage is being improved or a driveway is being replaced.
New construction on Hallsville's growing edges typically goes up on slab-on-grade foundations. Getting the vapor barrier, sub-base, and thickness right at the outset on Harrison County clay is what prevents the foundation-related issues that show up later when shortcuts are taken at the pour stage.
Residential lots on the sloped terrain near older parts of Hallsville and along drainage corridors need walls that can hold soil through East Texas spring rains. Poured concrete retaining walls with proper footing depth outlast landscaping timber and block alternatives in the wet-dry cycle this area sees every year.
Hallsville homeowners looking to extend their outdoor space beyond a plain gray slab can get stamped or stained finishes that make a patio or pool surround look finished rather than functional. Decorative concrete holds up in the East Texas heat as well as standard concrete when it is sealed properly on installation.
Hallsville has grown steadily from a small Harrison County community into a bedroom city of several thousand residents who mostly commute to Longview or Marshall. That growth - from under 3,000 people in 2000 to over 4,000 by the 2020 census - has produced two distinct property types on the same streets: older homes near the original town center that were built before modern base preparation standards and never had their driveways replaced, and newer subdivision homes on the edges built in the 2000s and 2010s where first-time owners are now seeing their original flatwork reach the 15-to-20-year mark. Both groups face the same underlying challenge - East Texas clay soil throughout Harrison County that expands in wet conditions and contracts in summer heat, putting stress on any concrete surface that was not designed to manage that movement.
Climate compounds the problem every year. Hallsville sits in a part of East Texas where mature pine and hardwood trees are everywhere on residential lots. Pine needles clog drainage and tree roots work into sub-bases under driveways and patios over time. Spring and early summer bring heavy thunderstorms, sometimes with hail, that accelerate surface wear and test drainage around every concrete edge. Winters are generally mild but occasional hard freezes - more common here than in South Texas - can crack existing concrete that has developed water-infiltrating surface cracks and been left unsealed. Homeowners who put off repairs tend to find the bill grows larger with each passing season.
Our crew works throughout Hallsville regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete contractor work here. Hallsville sits about 10 miles east of Longview and 13 miles west of Marshall along US Highway 80, which runs through town as Main Street - the main commercial corridor where most of the city's small businesses and services are located. Farm to Market Road 450 connects the center of town to Interstate 20 about 2 miles to the south, giving us fast access from Marshall. The city handles its own permits, inspections, and utility connections through City Hall on Willow Street - not a county office - which means local review and faster turnaround on permit questions.
Most residential streets in Hallsville are quiet, tree-lined neighborhoods where the primary customers are owner-occupant families - many tied to Hallsville ISD. Whether you live near the school campus or off one of the side roads closer to the I-20 interchange on FM 450, we cover the whole city and reach it quickly from our Marshall base. We also serve neighboring communities in the area, including Longview to the west and Marshall to the east - both within a short drive on Highway 80.
Phone us directly or use the contact form on this site. We respond within 1 business day. Telling us your address and a rough project description - patio, driveway, sidewalk, or foundation - is enough for us to prepare for the site visit.
We come to your Hallsville property before any pricing is discussed. We look at existing concrete condition, soil drainage, lot dimensions, tree proximity, and what permits your project requires under city code. You receive a written, itemized estimate so you can approve a specific scope, not a vague dollar range.
After you approve the estimate, we handle demo of any old surface, subgrade grading, gravel base compaction, and form setup. On Harrison County clay, this prep work is what separates a surface that lasts from one that starts cracking within two or three years. We do not cut corners here.
The concrete pour typically takes one day for residential work. We apply curing compound immediately after finishing and go over surface care instructions with you before leaving. Concrete needs three to seven days before foot traffic and longer before vehicles. We leave the site clean.
We cover all of Hallsville - from the older neighborhoods near Main Street to the newer subdivisions off FM 450. Submit a request and our team will follow up within 1 business day.
(430) 214-0018Hallsville sits in western Harrison County between Longview and Marshall along US Highway 80. The city has grown from a small farming community into a bedroom city with its own mayor and city council, school district, and commercial corridor along Highway 80 and FM 450. Hallsville ISD is the social center of the community - the kind of school district that draws families and keeps them here long term. Residential properties are predominantly owner-occupied, single-family homes on lots with grass yards and mature pine and hardwood trees, which is the typical pattern for small East Texas cities. Homes span a range of ages, from mid-20th century houses near the original town center to newer brick veneer and fiber cement builds on larger lots toward the city's edges.
The community is tight-knit and stable - Hallsville still holds local events like Western Days that bring residents together. FM 450 connects the city to Interstate 20 about 2 miles south of town, which makes it accessible from both the Longview and Marshall sides of Harrison County. Nearby communities we regularly serve include Longview to the west and Marshall to the east, both of which we cover as part of our regular Harrison County service area.
Complete foundation installation for residential and commercial projects.
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Learn MoreContact Total Marshall Concrete today for a free on-site estimate. We know Harrison County clay, we know Hallsville, and we are ready to get your project done right.