Why spend thousands of dollars to rent equipment to dig for a foundation, septic system, or sump pump, when you can rely on RE Constructors to do it for you? Our professionals have all the necessary machines, from a dump truck to a dozer, to provide prompt excavation services for you. Ensure your foundation work or other concrete project is completed properly with concrete services from RE Constructors. Our team has the experience and equipment to get the job done right the first time. Whether you need to pour a foundation or want a new septic system, RE Constructors has you covered.
Since 1980, RE Contractors has combined the two services so our residential and commercial customers can receive the whole package from one company. When you need to add concrete to your property or install a septic system, you don't want to deal with various contractors. With us, you don't have to. Our company offers everything you need to ensure consistency throughout the entire process.
After our concrete is poured, it is usually finished using a broom or trowel. A broom finish is usually performed on outdoor surfaces like sidewalks and driveways to crease a non-slip surface. Trowels are used to provide a smooth finish to interior concrete surfaces.
Manufactured concrete products can be reused, recycled, or repurposed, depending on their original application. Once the product has passed its structural usefulness, it can be ground up and used as an additive in concrete manufacture.
One of the benefits of concrete construction is that it is extraordinarily durable. Concrete is resistant to the ravages of time because it is weatherproof; the low water to cement ratios in concrete make it dense, durable, and abrasion, corrosion, and fire resistant.
Did you know that women who were recovering from breast cancer surgery, recovered quicker if they spent time in a garden? This is another great reason to create your own garden as it can translate to other recoveries as well.
The first building made with modern cement was the Eddystone Lighthouse in 1793. The structure is located in Cornwall, England, and was made with John Smeaton’s hydrolic cement, which was a mixture of pebbles, powdered brick, and a coarse aggregate.