
Logansport Concrete is your local concrete contractor in Winamac, IN, handling driveways, stamped concrete patios, and foundation work across Pulaski County. We reply within one business day and bring experience with the clay soils and hard winters that define concrete work in this part of northern Indiana.

Winamac homeowners looking to upgrade a plain slab into a surface that actually looks good will find that stamped concrete services hold up well here when installed with the right cold-climate mix and sealed before winter. The flat lots and modest-sized yards around town are a natural fit for a stamped patio or front walkway that adds real visual appeal without requiring the upkeep of natural stone or pavers.
Many homes in Winamac were built decades ago and their driveways show it - cracked surfaces, frost heave damage, and edges that have broken away after too many winters. A new concrete driveway poured over a compacted gravel base handles the clay soils and freeze-thaw cycles common to Pulaski County far better than patching an old one can.
Flat lots in Winamac can stay soggy long after a rain because the clay-heavy ground drains slowly. A properly sloped concrete patio channels water away from the house and gives you a dry, usable outdoor surface from the first warm day in May through the last cookout of October.
Older homes in Winamac often have garage floors that were poured thin or without adequate base preparation, leaving them cracked and uneven after years of ground movement. A new garage floor poured at proper thickness and with control joints in the right places gives you a flat, solid surface that is easy to clean and keeps holding up through northern Indiana winters.
Heaved and cracked sidewalks are a common sight on older in-town lots in Winamac, where tree roots, clay soil movement, and frost heave do the most damage over time. A properly poured replacement sidewalk with the right joints and base gives you a safe, level path that does not create a tripping hazard every spring.
Properties near the Tippecanoe River in Winamac and in low-lying parts of Pulaski County can see significant soil movement and moisture-related settling over the years. Foundation raising addresses uneven settlement before it becomes a structural problem, stabilizing homes that have shifted on the clay-heavy, seasonally wet ground this area sits on.
Winamac sits in northwestern Indiana where the Tippecanoe River runs through town and flat, clay-heavy soil covers most residential lots. Clay soil is particularly hard on concrete because it expands when wet and contracts when dry, stressing slabs from below with every rainfall and dry spell. The town park and neighborhoods near the river sit on low-lying ground that holds water longer than properties on higher ground, which accelerates the soil movement that causes slabs to crack and shift. Any concrete work here needs a solid compacted gravel base and proper drainage built in from the start - not as extras, but as standard practice for this part of the state.
Northern Indiana winters add a second layer of stress. Winamac sees genuine cold from December through February, with temperatures that drop well below freezing and stay there for weeks. Freeze-thaw cycles - when temperatures fall below freezing at night and rise above it during the day - repeat dozens of times each season, forcing water in and out of any small crack or porous surface. Homes built before the 1970s, which describe most of the housing stock in Winamac, often have concrete that was not mixed for modern cold-climate standards. Replacing or repairing concrete here requires a contractor who accounts for both the soil and the climate, not one who just pours what works in a warmer, drier part of the state.
Our crew works throughout Winamac regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. Winamac is the county seat of Pulaski County, which means permit and inspection work for projects in town runs through the local Pulaski County offices. We know the process and handle the paperwork on our customers' behalf so there are no surprises mid-project.
US Route 35 and State Road 14 are the main corridors through Winamac, and residential streets branch off from those routes into neighborhoods where most of the older wood-frame homes sit on in-town lots. We work regularly in these neighborhoods and on properties toward the edge of town where gravel driveways are still common and in-town concrete is aging. The BraunAbility campus brings a working-class, practical-minded community here - our customers want straight answers, fair prices, and a crew that shows up when they say they will.
We also serve customers in Rochester and Monticello, two nearby communities where soil conditions and winter weather create similar concrete challenges. Choosing a contractor who works in all three areas means you get someone who understands the regional patterns, not just one town.
Reach us by phone at (574) 516-6163 or through the contact form on this site. We reply to every inquiry within one business day - usually faster.
We visit your Winamac property in person before quoting - every lot is different, and ground conditions, drainage, and access all affect the price. There is no obligation and no pressure during the estimate.
If your project requires a permit from Pulaski County or the Town of Winamac, we pull it before work begins. We also schedule the concrete pour around weather windows - northern Indiana spring and fall weather can change quickly and we plan accordingly.
When the work is done, we walk the finished project with you before we leave your property. We explain the curing timeline, any restrictions on use, and what maintenance - like resealing - will keep your concrete in good shape through Winamac winters.
We serve Winamac and all of Pulaski County. Free estimates, no pressure, replies within one business day.
(574) 516-6163Winamac is the county seat of Pulaski County, a small town of roughly 2,300 to 2,500 people in northwestern Indiana. The Tippecanoe River runs through town and the community park sits along its banks, giving Winamac a recognizable natural landmark in the form of the historic Swinging Bridge - a 1923 pedestrian suspension bridge that locals have known for generations. The Pulaski County Courthouse anchors downtown, and most of the housing stock within the town limits consists of older wood-frame homes built before the 1970s on modest in-town lots.
BraunAbility, a manufacturer of wheelchair-accessible vehicles, is headquartered in Winamac and is one of the largest employers in the county. That industrial anchor shapes the local economy and the character of the community - it is a working town where homeowners are practical and take care of their properties with an eye toward value, not just appearance. The town sits at the intersection of US Route 35 and State Road 14, which connect it to Rochester to the south and larger cities further north. Homeowners near the Rochester and Monticello areas will recognize many of the same soil and climate conditions that affect concrete here in Winamac.
Safe, even sidewalks installed to code for homes and businesses.
Learn MoreLevel, finished interior floors for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreSolid steps and entries that welcome guests and last for years.
Learn MoreCommercial parking lots built for high traffic and longevity.
Learn MoreCall us or submit a request online - we serve all of Winamac and Pulaski County and will get back to you within one business day.