Skip to main content
Curing compound applied to new concrete driveway surface in Lenexa

Concrete Driveways in Lenexa, KS

Summer in Lenexa fills up fast — between festival season at Sar-Ko-Par and the parade of home projects across Falcon Valley and Canyon Creek, the best concrete pour windows don't wait around.

★★★★★13 Five-Star Reviews·377+ Projects Since 2015
(816) 339-8133

Is This the Right Summer to Finally Replace That Lenexa Driveway?

June through September is prime pour season in Johnson County. Warm overnight temps mean concrete cures evenly and gains full strength. But here's what most Lenexa homeowners don't realize — the best crews book out four to six weeks by mid-June. If your driveway has been cracking, settling, or pooling water near the garage, now is the window to act before the fall freeze-thaw cycle makes things worse.

Lenexa's growth has been explosive. The City Center corridor along 87th St Parkway brought modern infrastructure, but older neighborhoods like Old Town, Four Colonies, and Green Trails still have driveways poured decades ago. Many of those original slabs were only four inches thick over poorly compacted fill. They've served their time. A properly engineered replacement adds curb appeal, eliminates trip hazards, and handles Kansas weather for 25 to 30 years.

Since 2015, we've completed 377 projects across the Kansas City metro. Thirteen five-star Google reviews back up the quality. We know Lenexa's soil, its permitting requirements, and the specific challenges that come with pouring concrete alongside busy routes like I-35, Renner Boulevard, and K-10. Your driveway is personal — it's the first thing guests see and the last thing you cross before walking inside.

Service Details

What a New Concrete Driveway Actually Looks Like in Lenexa

A standard two-car concrete driveway in Lenexa runs about 16 to 20 feet wide and 30 to 50 feet long, depending on your lot depth and garage setback. We pour residential slabs at a minimum of four inches thick, but many Lenexa properties — especially those in Green Trails or Canyon Creek where heavy clay content is common — benefit from a five-inch pour with fiber mesh reinforcement. Thicker slabs resist heaving during the freeze-thaw cycles that hit Johnson County hard between November and March.

Finish options go well beyond the standard broom texture. Exposed aggregate works beautifully in neighborhoods near Sar-Ko-Par Trails Park where natural aesthetics matter. Stamped patterns can mimic flagstone or brick to complement older homes in Old Town Lenexa. We also install borders, integral color, and saw-cut patterns for homeowners who want a cleaner, more modern look that matches the City Center vibe along 87th St Parkway.

Every driveway we pour includes proper joint spacing to control cracking, compacted subgrade preparation, and a minimum 2% slope for water runoff. We tie into your existing apron, sidewalk, and garage floor at the correct elevation. If your current slab connects to a public sidewalk — common in Falcon Valley and Four Colonies — we coordinate with city requirements for the right-of-way transition.

View full concrete driveways details →

Local Considerations

Lenexa-Specific Concrete Driveways Considerations

Heavy Clay Subgrade in Johnson County Subdivisions

Most Lenexa neighborhoods sit on silty clay soil that expands when wet and shrinks when dry. This seasonal movement is the number-one cause of driveway cracking and corner settlement across Johnson County. We excavate six to eight inches below finished grade, remove any soft organic material, and compact the subgrade in lifts using a plate compactor. On properties with known drainage issues — especially near Little Mill Creek Park or low-lying lots along K-10 — we add a layer of compacted AB-3 crushed limestone base to improve load transfer and drainage beneath the slab.

HOA Requirements and Permit Coordination in Lenexa

Lenexa requires a right-of-way permit whenever driveway work extends to the public sidewalk or street apron. Many subdivisions in Falcon Valley, Canyon Creek, and Four Colonies also have HOA guidelines governing driveway width, material, and finish appearance. We handle permit applications with the City of Lenexa and review your HOA covenants before work begins. This avoids delays, fines, and the frustration of tearing out work that doesn't meet local requirements. We've navigated these approvals across dozens of Johnson County neighborhoods since 2015.

Drainage Direction on Flat Lenexa Lots

Lenexa's terrain is deceptively gentle. Many lots look flat but have subtle grade changes that send water toward garage doors and foundations if the driveway slope isn't engineered correctly. We survey elevation at multiple points during our site visit and design the slab to direct runoff toward the street or a designated drainage path. For homes near 87th St Parkway or in newer developments where impervious surface limits apply, we discuss options like ribbon driveways or permeable border strips that satisfy both drainage function and city stormwater code.

Our Process

From First Call to Finished Driveway — Your Lenexa Project Timeline

It starts with a phone call or online form. We ask a few quick questions — your address, rough driveway size, and what's prompting the project. Within a day or two, one of our contractors meets you at your Lenexa property. During the site visit, we measure the existing slab, check grade and drainage direction, note any connection points to sidewalks or the street apron, and look at access for the concrete truck. If you're on a cul-de-sac in Canyon Creek or a narrower street in Old Town, we plan truck routing and staging in advance so we don't tear up landscaping or block neighbors.

After the site visit, you receive a detailed written estimate — not a ballpark, but an itemized scope covering demolition, base prep, pour thickness, reinforcement, finish, and cleanup. We walk you through options like broom finish versus exposed aggregate, colored borders, or extra width for an RV pad. Once you approve the scope and schedule a date, we handle the city permit if your project requires one. Most Lenexa driveway permits take about five business days.

Pour day is where the planning pays off. Our crew arrives early, sets forms to the exact elevation and slope, and pours the concrete in a single continuous session. We cut control joints at the right intervals, apply your chosen finish, and begin curing protection before the sun gets too hot. The whole pour for a standard two-car driveway takes one day. You'll stay off it for about seven days while it cures, and we'll come back to strip forms, backfill edges, and inspect every joint.

About two weeks later, you've got a driveway that drains correctly, looks sharp from the street, and will handle Lenexa's freeze-thaw cycles for decades. We send you a care guide with sealing recommendations and seasonal maintenance tips specific to Kansas weather. That's it — no drawn-out timeline, no surprises on the invoice.

(816) 339-8133
Pricing

How Much Does Concrete Driveways Cost in Lenexa?

Type Cost / Sq Ft Typical 600 Sq Ft
Standard Gray (Broom Finish) $8–12 $4,800–$7,200
Colored / Stained $10–15 $6,000–$9,000
Exposed Aggregate $10–16 $6,000–$9,600
Stamped / Decorative $12–18 $7,200–$10,800

Most Lenexa residential driveways land between $4,800 and $9,500 depending on size, thickness, and finish. Demolition and removal of the old slab adds $800 to $1,500 — costs that run slightly higher here due to disposal site distances from western Johnson County.

Concrete Driveways FAQ for Lenexa, KS

Does Lenexa require a permit for a residential driveway replacement?

Yes, the City of Lenexa requires a right-of-way permit for any driveway work that connects to the public sidewalk or street. If you're only replacing the slab behind the sidewalk on private property, a permit may not be required, but we confirm this on a case-by-case basis. We handle the permit application, typically approved within five business days. There's a modest permit fee that we include in your estimate so nothing surprises you at the end.

How thick should a Lenexa driveway be?

We recommend a minimum of four inches for standard residential use. In neighborhoods with heavier clay content — common in Falcon Valley and Green Trails — we often pour five inches with fiber mesh reinforcement. If you park heavier vehicles like trucks or trailers on your driveway, five to six inches with rebar is the right call. A thicker pour costs more upfront but dramatically extends the slab's lifespan against Johnson County's freeze-thaw cycles and expansive soil movement.

Can you build a driveway wide enough for three vehicles on my Lenexa lot?

In most cases, yes. A three-car-width driveway runs about 27 to 30 feet wide. We check your lot setback requirements and any HOA rules before designing the layout. Some Falcon Valley and Canyon Creek covenants restrict driveway width relative to the home's frontage. If the full width isn't allowed, we can add a separate parking pad connected by a ribbon strip to stay within guidelines while giving you the extra space.

What's the turnaround time from estimate to completion?

During peak summer months, expect three to five weeks from signed estimate to completed pour. That includes about one week for permitting and two to three weeks of scheduling lead time. Spring and fall projects sometimes move faster. We'll give you an exact date at signing and stick to it unless weather forces a delay. Rain on pour day means we reschedule — we never pour into standing water or when storms are forecast within the cure window.

My Old Town Lenexa driveway is from the 1960s — is it worth saving?

Probably not. Most 1950s and 1960s-era driveways in Old Town Lenexa were poured thinner than today's standards, often without proper base preparation or control joints. After 50-plus years of freeze-thaw cycles and soil movement, the subgrade underneath is typically compromised. Resurfacing covers the cosmetic damage but doesn't fix the structural issues. A full removal and replacement with modern base prep, proper thickness, and engineered joints gives you a slab that lasts another 25 to 30 years. We remove and haul away the old concrete as part of every replacement project.

How do you handle the section between the sidewalk and the curb?

That section is called the apron or approach, and it falls within the city's right-of-way. Lenexa has specific standards for apron thickness, width, and slope. We pour the apron to city spec and match it to your new driveway for a seamless transition. If the existing curb cut needs widening or the curb itself is damaged, we address that during the project. The right-of-way permit covers this work, and we coordinate any required city inspection before the pour.

Do you pour driveways in fall or early winter in Lenexa?

We pour through mid-November most years, as long as overnight temperatures stay above 35 degrees Fahrenheit during the initial cure period. Fall pours actually work well in Lenexa — lower humidity, cooler daytime temps, and less competition for scheduling. We use insulated blankets to protect fresh concrete if an early cold snap arrives. Once nighttime lows consistently drop below freezing, we pause driveway work until spring. If you're planning a spring pour, booking in January or February locks in an early spot on the schedule.

Schedule Your Free Lenexa Driveway Assessment

We'll measure your existing driveway, check subgrade conditions, evaluate drainage patterns, and review any HOA or permit requirements specific to your Lenexa neighborhood — all before you spend a dollar.

Call (816) 339-8133
★★★★★ 13 Five-Star Reviews · 377+ Happy Customers · Since 2015
Call Now