
Custom Fayetteville Masonry & Concrete serves Springdale homeowners with brick repair, tuckpointing, chimney work, and foundation repair. We are based in Northwest Arkansas and respond to new inquiries within one business day - no waiting on a company from out of the area.

Springdale has a large share of homes built between the 1960s and 1990s with brick veneer exteriors - and those homes are now at the age where mortar deteriorates and freeze-thaw damage becomes visible. Our brick repair service replaces spalled or cracked bricks, rematches mortar color, and restores the wall to a weather-tight condition that holds through Springdale winters.
Brick veneer on Springdale homes from the 1970s and 1980s commonly has mortar joints that have hollowed out or gone sandy after decades of freeze-thaw cycles. Tuckpointing removes that deteriorated mortar and packs in fresh material, sealing out water before it works its way behind the brick and into the wall cavity.
Older Springdale neighborhoods near downtown have homes with chimneys that have been through 50 or more Arkansas winters. Cracked crowns, failing flashing, and deteriorated mortar joints are common - and they let water in fast during spring storm season. Repairing these problems before heavy rain arrives is always cheaper than dealing with water damage afterward.
Clay soil is widespread under Springdale, and its tendency to swell when wet and shrink when dry puts ongoing stress on slab foundations and crawl space structures. Sticking doors, diagonal cracks from window corners, and gaps between walls and ceilings are all signs the foundation under your Springdale home may need attention.
Newer subdivisions on the edges of Springdale often have lots with grade changes that need proper retention, especially where yards back up to drainage areas or where new development created cut-and-fill terrain. A masonry retaining wall manages water runoff, holds the slope stable, and creates usable outdoor space on a property that would otherwise erode.
Concrete walkways crack over time on clay soil, and Springdale winters accelerate the process. A brick or paver walkway handles freeze-thaw movement better than a solid slab, and damaged sections can be repaired without tearing out the entire path - making it a more practical long-term investment for Springdale homeowners.
A significant portion of Springdale's housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1990s, when brick veneer was the exterior finish of choice for builders across Northwest Arkansas. Those homes now have brick that is 30 to 70 years old - which means mortar joints that were never intended to last indefinitely are showing the results of decades of Arkansas winters. Springdale winters bring regular freeze-thaw cycles: temperatures drop below freezing at night and rise back above it during the day, sometimes multiple times in the same week. That repeated movement widens mortar joints, loosens bricks, and opens up gaps where water can enter. Homeowners who watch the problem through one more season typically end up with a larger repair than if they had acted the spring before.
The clay-heavy soil under much of Springdale adds another layer of challenge. Clay expands when it absorbs water and contracts when it dries out - a cycle that mirrors the region's wet springs and hot, dry summers. That ground movement puts pressure on slab foundations, pushes retaining walls out of plumb, and heaves concrete flatwork over time. For Springdale homeowners with brick veneer, slab foundations, or older retaining walls, a masonry contractor who understands these local soil and climate conditions will give you a more accurate assessment - and a longer-lasting repair - than one who is new to the area.
Our crew works throughout Springdale regularly. We know the brick-veneer ranch homes that make up much of the housing stock near downtown and the Shiloh Museum area, and we understand the difference between those older builds and the newer subdivision homes going up on the outskirts of town. When structural masonry work requires a permit in Springdale - which applies to chimney rebuilds, foundation changes, and significant load-bearing wall work - we handle the permit process with the City of Springdale Building Safety division so you do not have to.
Springdale sits at the center of the Northwest Arkansas metro, bordered by Fayetteville to the south and Rogers and Bentonville to the north. Major roads like Highway 412, Interstate 49, and Don Tyson Parkway run through the city and give us quick access to all parts of Springdale from our base. We know the difference in soil conditions between the flat areas near Arvest Ballpark and the hillier terrain going toward the city's edges - and that difference matters for foundation and retaining wall jobs.
We also serve Lowell, AR just to the north and frequently work throughout the broader metro area. If you are in Fayetteville or any surrounding community, we cover those areas as well.
We respond within one business day. A few quick questions about your home and what you are seeing help us prepare for the site visit so we are not starting from scratch when we arrive.
We visit your property, look at the damage in person, and explain what we find in plain language. No phone quotes - every estimate is based on actually seeing the work. You get a written breakdown of scope and cost before anything is agreed to.
If your project requires a permit from Springdale Building Safety, we handle that paperwork. Permit processing adds about one to two weeks, and we account for that in the project schedule from the start.
The crew cleans up at the end of every workday. When the job is complete, we walk you through what was done and give you written documentation - which is useful for your records, insurance, and any future sale of the property.
We serve all of Springdale, AR - from older neighborhoods near downtown to newer subdivisions on the city's edges. No pressure, no surprise charges.
(479) 485-4688Springdale is one of the four principal cities in the Northwest Arkansas metro, sitting between Fayetteville to the south and Rogers to the north along the Interstate 49 corridor. Tyson Foods, one of the largest meat-processing companies in the world, was founded here and still has major operations in the city. That employment base has given Springdale a long tradition of working families who own their homes and invest in them. As of the 2020 Census, the city had about 83,000 residents, with estimates since then putting the population well above 90,000. Much of the housing reflects the city's growth in the postwar era - single-story ranch homes and simple two-story builds with brick or wood exteriors, now 40 to 70 years old and reaching the age where major systems need attention.
The Shiloh Museum of Ozark History anchors downtown Springdale and reflects the city's deep roots in the region. Arvest Ballpark - home of the Northwest Arkansas Naturals minor league team - draws families from across the metro and sits in a neighborhood representative of Springdale's working-class character. Newer residential development continues on the city's edges, adding subdivisions with slab-foundation homes on lots that range from modest in-town parcels to larger rural-edge properties. Nearby communities like Lowell and Rogers share similar soil conditions and fall within our regular service area.
Restore structural integrity and stop foundation damage from spreading further.
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Learn MoreCall today or submit a free estimate request online. We are local, we respond quickly, and we do not charge for the site visit - get your assessment before the next freeze season arrives.