When we talk to property managers and contractors across Brainerd, whether it's a facility manager watching a warehouse floor deteriorate from the inside out or a municipality dealing with pavement joints that failed their second winter, the concern is almost always the same: "We sealed this already. Why is it still failing?"
Joint sealing fails when the wrong material goes into the wrong joint, or when the prep work gets skipped to save time. I remember a conversation with a commercial property owner near the Brainerd Industrial Park who had contracted a general crew to seal expansion joints on a large exterior slab the previous fall. By spring, water had worked its way under the slab, the subgrade had started shifting, and what was a straightforward sealing job had turned into a lifting and stabilization project. We came in, removed the failed sealant, prepped the joints properly, applied the right material for that joint width and movement pattern, and sealed it in a way that was built to hold through a Minnesota freeze-thaw cycle.
That situation didn't have to happen. A properly sealed joint stops water before it reaches the subbase, stops freeze-thaw pressure before it fractures the slab edge, and stops a maintenance problem from becoming a structural one.
Joint sealing isn't a finishing touch. In this climate, it's one of the most cost-effective ways to protect a concrete investment, and it only works when the contractor doing it understands concrete behavior, not just caulk guns. Technical Construction Solutions was built by Freddy Lewis, who grew up in a highway construction family and spent 15 years working in the field before founding TCS. That background, highway lifting, undersealing, concrete systems, void filling, and our trusted work as an insulation contractor, shapes how this crew approaches every joint sealing project, from a commercial parking lot in Baxter to a roadway expansion joint off Highway 371.
If your concrete joints are open, cracked, or holding water, the right time to fix them is before the next winter. Start with a free estimate.