
Precision Greenville Concrete serves Goldsboro and the surrounding Wayne County area with concrete parking lots, driveways, foundations, and flatwork for homes and commercial properties. We handle permits through the City of Goldsboro, provide written estimates before any work begins, and respond within one business day.

Goldsboro has a significant mix of residential and commercial properties, including many homes and small businesses near Seymour Johnson Air Force Base that see steady traffic and need durable parking surfaces. Asphalt softens and ruts in eastern NC summers, but a properly built concrete lot holds its shape through years of heat and heavy rainfall. Our concrete parking lot building service covers everything from residential parking pads to small commercial lots, with drainage grading built in from the start.
Many Goldsboro homes built between the 1950s and 1980s have ranch-style layouts with attached or detached garages and driveways that have never been replaced. After 40 or 50 years of Wayne County clay soil movement, those original driveways often show widespread cracking and uneven settling that patching cannot fix. We build replacement driveways with a compacted gravel base that accounts for how the local soil behaves through wet and dry seasons.
Goldsboro's ranch-style homes commonly have slab or crawl space foundations, and the clay-heavy Wayne County soil puts consistent pressure on both. New structures on the outskirts of the city - garages, workshops, and ADUs - need foundations that account for the soil conditions and drainage challenges specific to this area. We build slabs with proper reinforcement, slope, and base preparation for the eastern NC environment.
Goldsboro's older housing stock means many garages and utility spaces still have original concrete floors from the 1960s or earlier. Decades of humidity, temperature swings, and use have left those floors cracked, spalled, or uneven. When a floor reaches the point where repairs no longer make sense, a full replacement pour gives you a smooth, level surface built with the base preparation that the original installation never had.
Downtown Goldsboro and the older neighborhoods near the historic district have mature trees and aging sidewalk panels that have been lifted by roots or shifted by soil movement. Homeowners and landlords in these areas are responsible for the walkways on their property, and cracked or raised panels are both a liability and an eyesore. We remove damaged sections and pour replacements that sit level and meet local standards.
Properties in low-lying parts of Goldsboro and near the Neuse River corridor deal with soil erosion and waterlogging after major storms - a pattern that became clear after Hurricane Floyd in 1999 and again after Hurricane Matthew in 2016. A concrete retaining wall holds saturated soil in place, defines usable yard space, and prevents the kind of gradual erosion that slowly undermines driveways and foundations on properties near drainage channels.
Goldsboro is a city where the housing stock is old, the soil is demanding, and the weather puts consistent pressure on any concrete surface. A large share of homes were built before 1980, and many of those original driveways, garage floors, and foundations have been absorbing decades of clay soil movement, summer humidity, and occasional severe storm flooding. The Neuse River runs through Wayne County, and the flooding from Hurricane Floyd in 1999 and Hurricane Matthew in 2016 left a mark on how homeowners here think about drainage and structural integrity. Those storms were not anomalies - they were reminders that this part of eastern North Carolina gets hit hard and that concrete work has to be built with that reality in mind.
The connection between Seymour Johnson Air Force Base and the local housing market also shapes what contractors encounter in Goldsboro. The base brings in military families who often rent homes for two or three years before rotating to another assignment. Rental properties in the neighborhoods surrounding the base tend to see more turnover and, in some cases, deferred maintenance on exterior concrete - driveways, walkways, and parking pads that have not been touched in years. When those properties change hands or go back on the market, the concrete work often gets addressed all at once. Understanding the pace and character of the Goldsboro market means knowing which neighborhoods have that pattern and being ready for it.
The Wayne County soil is clay-dominant throughout the Goldsboro area, and we have pulled permits through the City of Goldsboro's planning and development offices for concrete work on both residential and commercial properties. We know what to expect when we excavate here - the clay layer is real, it shifts, and skipping proper base preparation in favor of a faster pour is the kind of shortcut that comes back to the homeowner as cracks and settling within a few years.
Goldsboro has distinct parts with different property profiles. The homes near Seymour Johnson Air Force Base tend to be modest ranch-style houses built in the 1950s through 1970s, with driveways and garage floors that are often showing their age. The older neighborhoods closer to downtown have larger lots, more mature trees, and sidewalk and driveway damage caused by root intrusion. Properties on the outskirts of the city, toward the rural parts of Wayne County, often have larger parcels with outbuildings, detached garages, and gravel areas that owners want to convert to concrete.
Goldsboro sits roughly between Wilson to the north and Fayetteville to the southwest, and we serve homeowners across that corridor. The soil and climate conditions are consistent throughout this part of eastern North Carolina, and the same base preparation approach applies in all of it.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form. We respond within one business day. We ask a few basic questions about the project - type, size, and current surface condition - before scheduling a free on-site visit at a time that works for you.
We come out to your property, measure the area, assess the soil and drainage conditions specific to your location in Wayne County, and walk through the work with you. You receive a written estimate with a full breakdown - no vague line items. Cost is discussed here, before anything is agreed to.
If a permit is required through the City of Goldsboro or Wayne County, we handle the application. Permit processing typically takes a few business days. We confirm a start date once it is approved and give you a clear timeline for each phase of the work.
We handle all demolition of existing concrete if needed, complete base preparation matched to Wayne County soil conditions, pour and finish the new surface, and do a final walkthrough with you after the curing period. Vehicles should stay off the surface for seven full days after the pour.
We serve homeowners and property owners throughout Goldsboro and Wayne County. Call us or submit a request and we will respond within one business day with a free, written estimate.
(252) 351-6010Goldsboro is the county seat of Wayne County in eastern North Carolina, with a population of about 33,000 people in the city proper and a wider service area that extends into the surrounding rural portions of the county. Seymour Johnson Air Force Base sits within the city limits and is one of the largest employers in the region, bringing a steady population of military families into the housing market. That mix of long-term homeowners, newer military families, and rental properties creates a busy and varied market for home contractors. The housing stock throughout the city is predominantly single-family, with most homes built between the 1940s and 1980s in ranch and modest Colonial styles. Those homes are the age where systems and surfaces need real attention - not cosmetic updates, but structural and exterior work that has been deferred for years.
Downtown Goldsboro has older neighborhoods with brick commercial buildings and residential streets that the city has been working to revitalize. Properties near the historic center tend to have the oldest housing stock and some of the most visible deferred maintenance. The Neuse River runs through Wayne County just south of the city, and low-lying properties in the area carry real flood history - particularly from major storms that have moved through eastern North Carolina over the past 30 years. Homeowners in those flood-affected areas understand drainage as a practical concern, not a theoretical one. We also serve homeowners in nearby Wilson, which sits to the north of Goldsboro and shares the same clay soil, hot-humid climate, and storm exposure that shapes concrete work throughout this part of the state.
Durable concrete driveways designed and poured to last for decades.
Learn moreCustom concrete patios that extend your outdoor living space beautifully.
Learn moreDecorative stamped concrete that mimics stone, brick, or custom patterns.
Learn moreSafe, code-compliant concrete sidewalks for residential and commercial properties.
Learn moreSmooth, sealed garage floor concrete built to handle heavy use and vehicles.
Learn moreArtistic concrete finishes that combine durability with striking visual appeal.
Learn moreStructurally sound retaining walls that control erosion and shape your landscape.
Learn moreLevel, polished concrete floors for homes, warehouses, and commercial spaces.
Learn moreSlip-resistant, heat-resistant concrete pool decks built for safety and style.
Learn moreSolid concrete steps and stoops crafted for curb appeal and daily use.
Learn moreEngineered concrete slab foundations that provide a stable base for any structure.
Learn moreFull foundation installation services for new construction and replacement projects.
Learn moreHeavy-duty concrete parking lots engineered for high-traffic commercial use.
Learn morePrecisely formed concrete footings that support decks, additions, and structures.
Learn moreFoundation raising and leveling to correct settling and restore structural integrity.
Learn morePrecise concrete cutting for repairs, expansions, and utility access.
Learn moreSpring and fall are the best windows for concrete work in Wayne County - reach out now to get on the schedule before the summer heat and hurricane season make timing harder.