Hey guys, it should be tax return time soon and my driveway is hurting. My snowblower threw quite a bit on the lawn this year.
Never was in that great of condition since we bought the house anyway.
As a licensed electrical contractor, i have many connections and knowledge of most trades (i pay attention).
But as for asphalt i'm uneducated and don't actually know anyone personally that does driveways. I have a decent amount of recommended guys to do it, just don't want to waste anyones time.
Dimensions are 80x20 now, but if price was decent enough, half way up, i'd shift over to a third lane to keep one car out of the way of the garage.
Currently it is paved, poorly.
Just need a starting point to know what i'm getting into before i start calling people for estimates. Things like estimated square ft price with tear out would help. I also hear about different thickness's, what should it be?
I'd consider concrete, but with it already being 80x20, that might get a little costly from what i read.
I know location plays alot into price, if it helps things in NJ tend to be on the more expensive end.
Thanks for any insight,
Joe
Never was in that great of condition since we bought the house anyway.
As a licensed electrical contractor, i have many connections and knowledge of most trades (i pay attention).
But as for asphalt i'm uneducated and don't actually know anyone personally that does driveways. I have a decent amount of recommended guys to do it, just don't want to waste anyones time.
Dimensions are 80x20 now, but if price was decent enough, half way up, i'd shift over to a third lane to keep one car out of the way of the garage.
Currently it is paved, poorly.
Just need a starting point to know what i'm getting into before i start calling people for estimates. Things like estimated square ft price with tear out would help. I also hear about different thickness's, what should it be?
I'd consider concrete, but with it already being 80x20, that might get a little costly from what i read.
I know location plays alot into price, if it helps things in NJ tend to be on the more expensive end.
Thanks for any insight,
Joe

