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Concrete demolition in Slidell covers everything from cracked driveways to deteriorated slabs and foundations across St. Tammany Parish. This guide explains the process, the equipment, and what property owners in the I-10/I-12 corridor need to know before starting a concrete removal project.
Slidell sits at the eastern edge of St. Tammany Parish, straddling the I-10 and I-12 corridors just miles from the Mississippi border. It is a fast-growing area with a mix of older residential neighborhoods, newer subdivisions, and commercial development along the Gause Boulevard and Military Road corridors. Concrete work here takes a beating from Louisiana’s heat, heavy rains, and the occasional hurricane storm surge that can undermine slabs and foundations with little warning.
When concrete fails, replacement is not far behind. But before you can pour new concrete, the old material has to come out, and that is where professional concrete demolition makes all the difference.
At TurnKey Demo Team, we handle a full range of concrete demolition work across Slidell and the surrounding St. Tammany Parish area. The most common project types include:
Driveway demolition: Concrete driveways crack, settle, and heave over time, especially in areas with clay-heavy soil like much of south Louisiana. We break up and remove full driveways or sections that need replacement, clearing the way for a new pour.
Slab demolition: Whether it is a patio slab, a utility pad, or the floor of an outbuilding, flat concrete slabs require jackhammering and heavy equipment to break up and haul away. Our team provides full concrete demolition services with same-day debris removal.
Foundation demolition: Older homes in Slidell sometimes have pier-and-beam foundations or deteriorated concrete perimeter foundations that need to come out before a rebuild or elevation project. Foundation work is among the most technically demanding concrete demolition we do, requiring careful planning to avoid disturbing adjacent structures.
We also handle concrete removal for commercial properties, including parking lots, loading docks, and industrial slabs.
The right method depends on the thickness of the concrete, the reinforcement inside it, access to the site, and what is adjacent to the work area. Our team uses several proven techniques depending on the job conditions.
Jackhammering is the most common approach for residential driveways and slabs up to six inches thick. Electric and pneumatic jackhammers break the concrete into manageable pieces that can be loaded and hauled. For larger slabs and commercial work, we bring in excavators with hydraulic breaker attachments that can process significantly more material in the same time frame. Learn more about the different approaches in our article on concrete demolition methods used in the New Orleans area.
Reinforced concrete, which contains steel rebar, requires additional steps. After breaking up the slab, the rebar must be cut and separated from the concrete chunks. We also want to understand what’s below the slab before we start. In Slidell, utility lines and drainage infrastructure can run close to the surface, and striking one during demolition creates a serious problem.
Slidell has seen significant flooding from multiple hurricanes, including Katrina in 2005 and Ida in 2021. Storm surge undermines slabs, lifts driveways, and saturates the soil beneath foundations. The result is concrete that looks intact but has lost its base support and will crack or collapse under load.
Before any concrete replacement, property owners should evaluate whether the base material, typically compacted gravel or crushed stone, was compromised. When we demolish storm-damaged concrete in Slidell, we often find voids or saturated soil underneath that need to be addressed before anything new is poured. Getting this right up front is far cheaper than replacing a new slab that settles within two years. Read about how concrete demolition compares to concrete removal in our post on the difference between concrete demolition and concrete removal.
Most residential concrete demolition in Slidell does not require a permit, particularly for driveways and patios. However, if you are demolishing a foundation or any structural concrete element as part of a building project, St. Tammany Parish building permits may be required. We recommend checking with the St. Tammany Parish Building Department to confirm requirements for your specific project before work begins.
Access is another consideration in Slidell, where some residential lots have limited driveway clearance or tight side yards. Our team scopes every project in advance to determine whether our standard equipment fits or whether we need to use smaller machinery or manual methods in confined areas. Learn how we approach permitting for demolition projects in our guide on demolition permits in the New Orleans region.
TurnKey Demo Team provides concrete demolition services in Slidell and across the eastern side of St. Tammany Parish. From Olde Towne Slidell to the Fremaux area and out toward Lacombe, we bring the equipment and the expertise to handle projects of any size.
We price projects transparently, show up on schedule, and handle debris removal as part of every job so you are not left with a pile of broken concrete on your property. For a look at how concrete demolition costs compare to other demolition types, check our article on residential demolition costs for 2026.
Standard residential concrete is typically four to six inches thick and can be handled with jackhammers. Anything thicker, reinforced with heavy rebar, or in a large commercial slab generally calls for an excavator with a hydraulic breaker for efficiency and safety.
Yes. Rebar is separated from the broken concrete on-site. Concrete and metal are handled and disposed of separately. We do not leave materials behind for the property owner to deal with.
A standard two-car driveway can typically be demolished and hauled away in a single day. Larger driveways, circular drives, or those with heavy reinforcement may take longer. We give every customer a realistic timeline estimate before work begins.
Yes. Partial driveway demolition is common when only a specific section has cracked or settled. We saw-cut clean edges to ensure a proper bond when the replacement concrete is poured.
Flood-undermined concrete should be evaluated before demolition begins, not because it is harder to remove, but because voids or saturated soil underneath can present safety hazards during the process. Our team assesses conditions before starting work.
Yes. We serve all of St. Tammany Parish including Mandeville, Covington, Lacombe, Pearl River, and surrounding communities. Contact us to discuss your project location.
Concrete projects move faster when the old material is out of the way cleanly and on schedule. If you have a driveway, slab, or foundation that needs to come out in Slidell or the surrounding St. Tammany Parish area, TurnKey Demo Team is ready to get started. Call us at (504) 732-9194 or reach out online to schedule your estimate.