Driveway removal
Use this page if the main concern is a front drive, apron, or garage approach that is failing.
Not every asphalt project is a full driveway. This guide helps homeowners decide whether a rear pad, side-lot space, or shared strip is a simple removal job or a tighter access project that needs more planning.
Small parking areas are often tighter than a standard front driveway. Crews may need to work around fences, retaining walls, utility boxes, basement entries, or neighbor access, so the access path can matter as much as the asphalt itself.
In Seattle, these spaces also tend to sit near planted areas and drainage paths. A good removal plan should account for runoff, cleanup, and protecting nearby concrete or landscaping.
A smaller asphalt area is not always easier. Rear pads and side spaces can be slower to remove when equipment access is limited or debris has to be staged away from neighbors, walkways, or planted edges.
Use this page if the main concern is a front drive, apron, or garage approach that is failing.
Learn how the removed asphalt is loaded, transported, and cleared from the property.
If you call or submit details through an outside service, review that service's privacy terms before sharing personal information.
Older neighborhood lots and alley access points can make a small parking pad more complicated than it looks.
Practical for homes with side pads, drainage issues, or mixed-use access behind the house.
Useful when a compact residential space needs a simple tear-out and haul-away plan.
Useful for larger rear spaces and older pads where drainage and cleanup need a practical plan.
Good for compact island parking areas where nearby landscaping and curb appeal matter.