Columbus, GA · Phenix City, AL · Surrounding Areas

Your Driveway Has
More Life in It

Most gravel driveways don't need new stone — just the right equipment and technique to recover what's already there.

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Gravel driveway before and after restoration

The Thing Most People Don't Know

The Gravel Is Still There — Just Buried

Years of traffic, rain, and erosion don't make gravel disappear — they push it to the sides and mix it into the sub-base. Most driveways that look terrible from potholes, washouts, and bare dirt still have the vast majority of their original stone — it just needs to be recovered and regraded.

We use Harley rakes and grading equipment to recover buried stone from the edges and shoulders, restore the crown (the slight raised center that drains water to the sides), and re-establish proper slope. Many clients are amazed at how much material is recovered and how new the driveway looks without a single new load of gravel.

  • Recover buried stone from shoulders and low edges
  • Restore proper crown for water drainage
  • Eliminate potholes and low spots
  • Re-establish slope to prevent pooling
  • Harley rake finish for a clean, consistent surface
  • Add new gravel as a top dressing if needed
Restored gravel driveway with proper crown

The Key to a Long-Lasting Driveway

Crown and Drainage Are Everything

A gravel driveway without crown is a gravel driveway that will fail. Water that sits in the center of a driveway migrates stone downward and outward, creates potholes, softens the sub-base, and accelerates erosion. Within a few seasons, a flat driveway becomes a muddy, rutted mess.

The crown — a slight raise in the center running the length of the drive — sheds water to the shoulders where it can drain harmlessly into the surrounding grade. This simple geometry is what separates a driveway that lasts 10+ years from one that degrades every season.

  • Crown height proportional to drive width
  • Consistent slope along the full length of the drive
  • Shoulder runoff directed to grade, ditch, or drain
  • Sub-base compacted and stable before surface treatment

What We Do

Driveway Services

Crown Restoration

Regrade the driveway to establish proper crown height and ensure water drains to the shoulders rather than pooling in the center or low spots.

Stone Recovery

Use Harley rakes and grading equipment to push buried shoulder material back into the drive surface, recovering existing stone investment.

Pothole Filling

Fill deep ruts and potholes with recovered or new gravel, compacted and leveled into the surrounding surface for a smooth, even drive.

New Gravel Installation

When existing material is insufficient, we supply and install new gravel as a top dressing or full base replacement, properly graded and crowned.

Culvert Installation

Install or replace culverts where the driveway crosses a drainage ditch or swale, ensuring water passage is unobstructed in all weather conditions.

Shoulder & Edge Cleanup

Clean up overgrown edges, redistribute displaced stone, and define driveway boundaries to restore clean lines and prevent future spreading.

Questions

Gravel Driveway FAQ

Most driveways need regrading first, not new stone. If you look at the shoulders and edges of your drive, you'll often see mounds of displaced gravel that have been pushed out over the years. A regrading job recovers that material and redistributes it. After regrading, if the surface depth is still insufficient, a thin top dressing of new gravel can be added. We assess this during the estimate.

A typical residential gravel driveway (100–500 feet) can usually be completed in a single day. Longer drives, drives with severe damage, or those requiring culvert work may take 1–2 days. We'll give you a specific timeline based on your driveway during the estimate.

For Georgia, #57 limestone or granite is a commonly used and reliable driveway surface material. Crusher run (processed gravel with fines) makes an excellent base that compacts well and locks in place. We recommend against pea gravel and smooth round stone — they roll underfoot and tires, never compact, and create traction problems. We match the material recommendation to your base conditions and budget.

A well-maintained gravel driveway with good crown and drainage typically needs light touch-up grading every 2–3 years and a more thorough restoration every 5–7 years. Driveways without crown or with poor drainage degrade faster and need attention more frequently. After a proper restoration, you'll notice a significant improvement in how long the surface holds up.

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