The Detail
Everything you'd ask a specialist on the doorstep.
Materials, methods, variations, and the small decisions that separate a 20-year driveway from a five-year one.
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Block paving repair, lift, fix, relay
Sunken block repair involves lifting the affected blocks with paving keys, identifying the cause of the local sub-base failure, addressing it (re-compacting MOT, fixing local drainage, removing a root cause), re-bedding on fresh sharp sand, re-laying the original blocks, and re-sanding the joints. Done correctly, the repaired section is indistinguishable from the surrounding paving within a few weeks.
Tarmac repair, cut, prime, patch
Tarmac repair is more demanding than it looks. The damaged section is saw-cut to a clean rectangular edge (not chiselled out), excavated to sound base, primed with a bitumen tack coat, and patched with matching hot-laid tarmac compacted with a heavy roller. The patch is visible for one season then weathers in. Cold-laid 'pothole patch' material is repair material, it has its place for emergency winter patching, not permanent repair.
Resin repair, the hardest
Resin repair is genuinely difficult. The original aggregate has weathered; new aggregate is fresh. Matching colour, gradation and surface finish is craftsmanship, we keep records of every job we install and can usually source matching aggregate from the original supplier. Repairs to driveways we didn't install need a careful sample and match exercise first.
Edge repair, the highest-value fix
Re-haunching a failing edge is the single highest-value driveway repair available. A one-day job at year five prevents a £6,000 re-lay at year eight. We catch and re-haunch failing edges as a routine part of any maintenance visit.
When repair is the wrong answer
If your driveway has a failed sub-base across the whole area, if the falls are fundamentally wrong, if the original installation skipped the structural basics, repair is throwing money at a problem that needs proper replacement. We inspect honestly and tell you. We have walked away from repair quotes where the right answer was 'replace, not repair', the homeowner gets a straight assessment, every time.