1 Concrete Leveling Contractors in Gallup, New Mexico
If you need concrete leveling in Gallup, the usual culprits are Mancos Shale expansive clay with shrink-swell movement, Colorado Plateau piedmont slopes with caliche and petrocalcic horizons, Puerco River floodplain parcels with flood and seepage, coal-mine subsidence on historic Gallup Sandstone and Mesaverde Group mining tracts, arroyo flash-flood corridors, and historic railroad-town and Route 66 fill in the densely developed blocks. Gallup is a city and the county seat of McKinley County, western New Mexico, located 20 miles east of the Arizona border, along Interstate 40, historic US Route 66, and the BNSF Railway transcontinental mainline. Gallup was founded in 1881 as a railhead for the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad and was named after David Gallup, a paymaster for the railroad. McKinley County was created in 1901 and named for President William McKinley. By 1926, US Route 66 ran straight through Gallup, turning the town into a key stop on America's Mother Road. Gallup is named in the lyrics of the song "(Get Your Kicks on) Route 66." Gallup is known as the "Heart of Indian Country" because it sits on the edge of the Navajo Nation and is also home to members of many other tribes. Over three-quarters of its population are Native American, with residents from the Navajo, Hopi, and Zuni tribes. Today Gallup (population 21,899 at the 2020 census, the McKinley County seat) is a Colorado Plateau city shaped by its 1881 Atlantic and Pacific Railroad founding, 1926 Route 66 heritage, Navajo Nation edge setting, Heart of Indian Country identity, the I-40 corridor, the BNSF mainline, and twentieth-century trading-post, railroad, and Native American arts residential stock.
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Local Contractors
1 contractor serving Gallup
North Eighty Construction
Local concrete leveling pros in Gallup, New Mexico specializing in mudjacking. Driveways, sidewalks, patios, and loading docks restored for residential and commercial properties throughout Gallup and surrounding areas.
Gallup sits in a valley along the Puerco River at approximately 6,467 feet elevation. Bedrock is principally the Cretaceous Mesaverde Group sandstone and shale sequence (including the Gallup Sandstone, Dilco Coal Member, and Crevasse Canyon Formation), with deeper Mancos Shale and localized Tertiary and Quaternary volcanic and alluvial deposits. Above bedrock, surficial materials include Quaternary Puerco River alluvium on the Puerco floodplain parcels with flood and seepage character, Quaternary Colorado Plateau piedmont-slope alluvial-fan gravel and sand on the piedmont parcels (caliche and petrocalcic character), Holocene arroyo alluvium on the ephemeral-stream flats with flash-flood character, localized Mancos Shale expansive-clay residuum with shrink-swell hazard, localized Gallup Sandstone and Mesaverde Group coal-mine subsidence features on historic mining tracts, and historic railroad-town, Route 66, and coal-mining fill on the densely developed parcels. Local soils include Sparank and Penistaja fine sandy loams on the Colorado Plateau piedmont parcels (caliche and petrocalcic character), Fruitland and Doak loams on the Puerco River floodplain and terrace parcels, Persayo and Blancot clay loams on the Mancos Shale expansive-clay parcels (shrink-swell hazard), and Torriorthents and Torrifluvents on the arroyo and Puerco-channel parcels. Between expansive shale, piedmont caliche, Puerco seepage and flooding, coal-mine subsidence, arroyo flash flooding, and historic railroad and Route 66 fill, plus steady cut-and-fill along I-40, historic US 66, and BNSF, subgrade behavior is the primary driver of slab movement here.
The climate is cold semi-arid and high elevation (BSk), with warm summers and cold winters. Annual precipitation runs about 11 inches, with roughly 17 inches of snowfall. Winters cycle through 140 to 180 freeze-thaw events. January lows average near 14 Fahrenheit, and frost penetration past 24 inches is common on exposed ground. Mean annual temperature runs about 48 degrees.
Typical projects in Gallup include driveway and walkway leveling on twentieth-century Colorado Plateau trading-post, railroad, Route 66, and Native American arts residential stock, garage approach and apron repair on newer homes, and patio and portal work on the older 1881 Atlantic and Pacific Railroad era houses. Commercial slab work runs along I-40 and historic US 66. We regularly coordinate BNSF Railway transcontinental-mainline approach-corridor work with BNSF and the Federal Railroad Administration, historic US 66 corridor historic-preservation work with the NM Historic Preservation Division, Navajo Nation border approach-and-buffer-corridor work with the Navajo Nation and the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Red Rock Park and Church Rock sandstone-mesa approach-corridor work, Mancos Shale expansive-clay parcel work, coal-mine subsidence parcel work with the NM Mining and Minerals Division and the Abandoned Mine Land program, piedmont caliche parcel work, and arroyo flash-flood corridor work. Other common jobs include Gallup-McKinley County Schools institutional flatwork and Gallup City Hall and McKinley County Courthouse municipal work. BNSF mainline, historic Route 66, Navajo Nation approach, expansive shale, coal-mine subsidence, and piedmont caliche flatwork together make up a substantial share of local demand.
Polyurethane foam injection in western McKinley County runs about $11 to $18 per square foot, with Colorado Plateau, Navajo Nation edge, Route 66, and high-elevation factors shaping the pricing. Most residential projects in Gallup fall between $1,200 and $2,450. Mudjacking remains available on stable Sparank and Penistaja piedmont parcels at $5 to $9 per square foot, but we avoid it on Persayo and Blancot expansive-shale parcels, on piedmont caliche parcels, on coal-mine subsidence parcels, and on arroyo parcels. A standard driveway lift usually finishes at $1,250 to $1,850. BNSF, historic Route 66, and Navajo Nation approach multi-slab projects commonly exceed $4,400.
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Gallup Concrete Services
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Choosing a Contractor in Gallup
What to know before hiring a concrete leveling contractor in Gallup, New Mexico.
Each contractor serving Gallup brings a different mix of services, coverage, and warranty terms. Look at what they specialize in (slab jacking, mudjacking, and concrete leveling), how broad their service area is, and what their warranty covers. A contractor who explains their approach clearly and provides a detailed written estimate is usually a good sign.
Comparing Contractors in Gallup
Key factors to evaluate before requesting estimates.
Match the service to your slab
Driveways, sidewalks, patios, and garage floors each have different load and drainage requirements. Make sure the contractor you contact has experience with your specific slab type.
Ask about the leveling method
Mudjacking and foam leveling are the two main approaches. Foam is lighter and cures in about 15 minutes; mudjacking costs less upfront. Ask each contractor which method they use and why it fits your situation.
Confirm the service area
Some contractors serve a wide region while others focus on specific metros. Contractor profiles on ConcreteWorks show coverage areas for Gallup, so check before reaching out.
Compare warranties side by side
Warranty length and terms vary. A longer warranty is valuable, but read what it actually covers. Some warranties exclude certain soil conditions or only apply to the original homeowner.
Understand available services
Contractors in Gallup offer slab jacking, mudjacking, concrete leveling, and concrete repair. Each has different material costs, cure times, and weight characteristics that affect which slabs they work best on. Ask contractors which approach they recommend for your project and why.
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