Sidewalks & walkways
Concrete Walkway Cost in Denver: Planning Front Paths, Side Yards, and Home Access
A concrete walkway can make a home safer, cleaner, and easier to access. Whether the project is a front path, side-yard walkway, backyard connection, or replacement for cracked concrete, the estimate depends on more than length and width.
Length, width, and route
A straight front walkway is different from a curved garden path, side-yard access route, or walkway that connects a driveway to a patio. The layout affects forms, labor, joints, concrete quantity, and how the walkway connects to porches, garages, gates, landscaping, and existing slabs.
Existing concrete and tear-out
Old cracked concrete, sinking sections, pavers, rock, roots, or landscaping may need removal before the new walkway is installed. Tear-out and disposal should be separated from the new concrete scope so the estimate is clear.
Drainage, slope, and trip hazards
Denver walkways should move water away from the home and avoid low spots that can freeze. If the existing walkway is uneven, sunken, or creating a trip hazard, the cause should be considered before replacement so the new concrete has a better chance to perform.
What to send before asking for a walkway estimate
Send photos of the existing or proposed walkway area, rough length and width, city or neighborhood, whether existing concrete or landscaping needs removal, notes about slope, drainage, steps, porch or driveway connections, and desired timeline.
Want a concrete estimate in Denver?
Call Pro Concrete Designs and share your project type, city, rough size, photos if available, and ideal timeline.
Call (720) 948-7553