Abilene Concrete serves Stamford, TX with stamped concrete surfaces, driveway construction, and residential flatwork built for the soils and climate of the Jones-Haskell county area. We provide written estimates within one business day with no obligation — so you have the full picture before committing.

Stamford sits on the border of Jones and Haskell counties in the West Texas Rolling Plains, 41 miles north of Abilene along US-277, with a population of just under 3,000. It is classified as entirely rural — there are no suburban fringe developments here, just a compact historic downtown around a traditional courthouse square, open rangeland, and the working ranch properties that have defined the area since the Swenson brothers established the townsite in 1900. The main commercial street through downtown is Swenson Avenue, named for that founding ranching family, and the SMS Ranches — successor to the Swenson Land and Cattle Company — remains headquartered in Stamford to this day.
Every July 4th weekend, Stamford hosts the Texas Cowboy Reunion, a nationally recognized event that has brought working ranch cowboys together since 1930. That week, parking surfaces, entry drives, and outdoor concrete areas get genuine use from event traffic. The city also has a rare civic asset in the Stamford Carnegie Library, one of only four Carnegie libraries still operating as public libraries in Texas.
Lake Stamford, a 5,124-acre reservoir about 10 miles east of town on Paint Creek, anchors the area's recreational geography. Properties near the lake, along Haskell, TX to the north, and throughout the surrounding Rolling Plains routinely need driveways, pads, and outdoor concrete surfaces that hold up under agricultural and ranch traffic.
Ranch and rural homeowners in the Stamford area have been investing in stamped concrete patios, entry drives, and outdoor entertaining spaces that hold up through the extremes of West Texas weather. We use UV-stabilized sealers and properly compacted sub-bases that account for the Rolling Plains clay soil, so the decorative finish lasts rather than fading and cracking within a few seasons.
Anson, the Jones County seat, is directly south of Stamford on US-277. Property owners in both communities often use us for the same projects — driveways, patios, and concrete flatwork — since we travel the US-277 corridor regularly and can schedule both areas on the same mobilization.
Rural and ranch properties around Stamford often have long drives that see heavy pickup, trailer, and equipment traffic daily. We size driveway thickness and base preparation for actual loads — not a generic suburban spec — so the concrete handles what gets parked and driven on it.
Properties near Lake Stamford and throughout the Stamford area get genuine outdoor use for most of the year. A concrete patio built with proper drainage slope and control joints for the local soil conditions stays level and serviceable far longer than a wood deck in this climate.
New construction on rural lots in Jones and Haskell counties requires slab foundations engineered for the region's expansive clays. We work with the soil conditions here rather than around them, building foundations that account for shrink-swell behavior from the ground up.
Rolling terrain and seasonal creek drainage across the Stamford area create erosion and grade challenges that retaining walls solve. Concrete walls hold up better than timber or block in the West Texas soil conditions, with no rotting, no shifting block faces, and no ongoing maintenance beyond occasional inspection.
Stamford is 100% rural in Census geography, which means most properties here are on larger lots with longer driveways, outbuildings, working pens, and vehicle storage that all need concrete. The Rolling Plains soil in this part of Jones and Haskell counties behaves much like the expansive Vertisol clays found throughout this region of West Texas — absorbing moisture and swelling, then drying and contracting. That cycle, repeated over years, punishes concrete that was poured without adequate base depth or joint design.
Lake Stamford's seasonal water-level fluctuation — Texas Parks and Wildlife notes annual swings of 4 to 10 feet — means the soil moisture environment around properties east of town changes dramatically throughout the year. Driveways, pads, and slabs near the lake are exposed to the wet-dry extremes that cause the fastest failure in under-built concrete.
The Texas Cowboy Reunion brings significant vehicle and foot traffic through downtown Stamford and the surrounding area every July. Commercial and downtown properties along Swenson Avenue and around the event grounds need surfaces in good condition. That kind of event traffic also makes visible any deferred maintenance on parking areas and entry walks that might otherwise go unnoticed.
For decorative applications — stamped concrete patios, pool surrounds, and entry features — the Stamford climate presents a specific challenge. Summer temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and the UV index here bleaches and degrades standard concrete sealers faster than in most parts of the country. Premium UV-stabilized sealer and a reapplication schedule of every one to two years are minimum requirements for any decorative concrete to maintain its appearance here.
We pull permits for work inside Stamford's city limits through the City of Stamford and have worked on projects ranging from residential driveways on the north side of town to ranch entry pads on properties that front US-277. One pattern we see consistently on Stamford properties is original caliche sub-base material under concrete poured decades ago — it was common practice in this region and performs reasonably well when it is still properly compacted, but once water has gotten under the edges and the base material has degraded, repair gets expensive quickly.
Downtown Stamford around Swenson Avenue retains a traditional Texas town character, and the historic courthouse square layout means some older commercial and civic properties have aging sidewalk and entry concrete that predates modern joint-spacing and base-prep standards. The Stamford Carnegie Library, one of only four still operating in Texas, is a good anchor reference for where the historic core of town sits relative to newer residential growth to the west.
We travel US-277 regularly between Abilene and the communities north of town, including Haskell and Anson. Property owners anywhere along that corridor can schedule with us for the same services, same timeline, and same no-obligation estimate process.
Call us at (325) 283-1159 or submit through the estimate form. We respond to all Stamford-area requests within one business day to confirm your project and schedule a site visit.
We visit the property, assess the soil, drainage, and access, and give you a written estimate with line-item detail on materials, base preparation, and timeline. You see exactly what it costs before any decision is made.
Where required, we handle permits through the City of Stamford before mobilizing. Sub-grade prep, demolition of existing material, and base compaction happen before the pour day, so the concrete work itself goes smoothly. You do not need to be present during prep.
The concrete is poured, finished, and sealed on schedule. For stamped work, pattern placement and color application happen the same day as the pour. We walk you through the finished surface before leaving, and the project is ready for vehicle traffic in 7 days.
All Stamford, TX requests receive a response within one business day. Your estimate is written and itemized with no obligation to proceed — just clear information about what the project will cost and how long it will take.
(325) 283-1159Durable concrete driveways poured and finished to withstand Texas heat, heavy vehicles, and daily use.
Learn moreCustom concrete patios designed for outdoor living, from simple slabs to shaped and finished surfaces.
Learn moreStamped concrete that mimics stone, brick, or wood grain at a fraction of the material cost.
Learn moreSmooth, even sidewalks poured to code with proper slope, jointing, and a clean finished edge.
Learn moreReinforced garage floor slabs poured level and strong enough to handle vehicles, tools, and equipment.
Learn moreStained, polished, or textured concrete surfaces that add visual interest to any indoor or outdoor space.
Learn moreConcrete retaining walls built to hold back soil, manage drainage, and prevent erosion on sloped lots.
Learn moreInterior and exterior concrete floor installations finished to the level of flatness your project requires.
Learn moreSlip-resistant pool deck surfaces poured and textured to stay cool underfoot during hot West Texas summers.
Learn moreSolid concrete steps formed and poured for entryways, stoops, and grade changes around your property.
Learn moreMonolithic and post-tension slab foundations poured on properly prepared and compacted subgrade.
Learn moreNew foundation installations engineered for the local clay soils and expansive conditions of the region.
Learn moreCommercial-grade concrete parking lots poured thick enough to handle repeated traffic without cracking.
Learn moreConcrete footings excavated and poured to the depth required by local building codes and soil conditions.
Learn moreFoam injection and piering methods used to lift and level settled or sunken concrete foundations.
Learn morePrecision concrete cutting for expansion joints, utility trenches, demolition, and repair work.
Learn moreServing these cities and communities.
Call Abilene Concrete or submit an estimate request — we cover Jones and Haskell counties and respond to every inquiry within one business day.