Step 07 · Concrete
Concrete Slabs & Approaches
The concrete slab is the most permanent, least reversible part of the project. Thickness, reinforcement, and finishing choices need to match how the building will actually be used — because what gets poured on day one is what you'll live with for decades.
Choosing Slab Thickness (4" to 8")
Slab thickness is a use-driven decision, not a style decision. A rough guide:
- 4" — residential garage floors, light storage, foot traffic, small vehicles
- 5" — daily-driver vehicles plus occasional trailer parking, light shop work
- 6" — shops with compressors, lifts, heavier pickups, farm equipment
- 7–8" — heavier equipment, truck shops, loaders, commercial service areas
A thicker slab isn't automatically "better" — it's better for heavier loads. Overspec'ing adds cost without proportional benefit for light use.
Reinforcement Options
Some form of reinforcement is standard on most slabs. Common choices:
- Fiber mesh — synthetic fibers mixed into the concrete to help control shrinkage cracking
- Welded wire mesh — a steel mesh sheet placed in the middle of the slab depth
- Rebar — steel bars laid in a grid, often #3 or #4 at 18–24" spacing, chaired up to mid-depth
- Combinations — heavier use often pairs rebar with fiber mesh for both strength and crack control
Reinforcement only works when it's set at the right height in the slab. Mesh laid flat on the ground and then poured over is doing very little — it needs to be chaired or pulled up during the pour.
Saw Cuts, Finishing & Curing
Concrete always cracks — the trick is controlling where. Saw cuts (or tooled joints) give the slab a preferred place to crack in a straight line. For shop and garage slabs, cuts typically go in within a day of the pour, laid out at regular intervals based on slab thickness.
Surface finish is the other big choice:
- Steel trowel finish — smooth, easy to clean; the default for most shops and garages
- Broom finish — adds texture and grip; better for exterior aprons and slabs that may see water
- Sealer — applied after curing, improves stain resistance and appearance
Curing matters too. Fresh concrete needs time and moisture to reach strength. Cold pours in an Illinois winter need blankets or heat; hot summer pours need the right mix and attention to avoid rapid dry-out.
Shop Use vs Storage Use
Think about what the slab will actually experience:
- Will you run a vehicle lift on it?
- Will a tractor or skid steer park and turn on it regularly?
- Will you drop tools, wheels, or engines on it?
- Will it get wet, salted, or see chemical spills?
- Will you want to mount equipment directly to it?
The answers shape thickness, reinforcement, and finishing. A slab spec'd for a daily-driver parking garage is not the same slab that handles a loader tracking in dirt and salt all winter.
Aprons, Approaches, Sidewalks & Stoops
The interior slab is only part of the concrete story. Exterior concrete usually includes:
- Apron — concrete directly outside each overhead door; keeps mud and ruts away from the door
- Approach — a longer concrete strip from the driveway to the apron, especially useful for heavy vehicles
- Sidewalks & pads — paths to walk doors, pads for HVAC equipment or propane tanks
- Stoop — a small landing outside a walk door
Skipping the apron is one of the more common regrets customers mention years later — watching mud, gravel, and ice collect right at the door every spring.
Concrete Planning Before the Pour
Anything that has to go into or under the slab needs to be set before the concrete truck rolls up. That includes:
- Plumbing stubs for sinks, bathrooms, or floor drains
- Conduit sleeves for electrical or data coming up from underground
- PEX tubing for radiant floor heat
- Sleeves for future services that might be added later
- Vapor barrier and insulation (rigid foam under heated slabs)
- Base stone, compacted properly with the right thickness
A pre-pour walkthrough — with the owner, the concrete crew, and the contractor — is worth the time. It's the last chance to catch a missing sleeve or a drain in the wrong spot.
Planning a Slab? Let's Talk Thickness & Use
The right slab spec depends on what you'll put on it. Share your plans and we'll help you spec it correctly the first time.
FAQ
What slab thickness should I use?
4" is typical for light storage and residential garage floors. 5–6" is common for shops with compressors, lifts, or farm equipment. 6–8" (with additional reinforcement) fits heavier equipment, truck shops, and commercial use.
Should I pour concrete right away?
Not always. Some customers pour immediately; others intentionally wait a season for fill to settle, especially on fresh pads. There are good reasons on both sides — talk through the timing based on your site and use.
Do pole barn slabs need reinforcement?
Some form of reinforcement is standard on most slabs. Options include fiber mesh added to the concrete, welded wire mesh, or rebar in a grid. The right reinforcement depends on slab thickness, intended load, and local conditions.
Are aprons really necessary?
Not technically, but skipping them is a common long-term regret. Aprons outside each overhead door keep mud, ruts, and standing water away from the door seal.