The parking lot is usually the most ignored asset on any commercial property. Owners focus on the building, the landscaping, and the signage, while the asphalt out front quietly falls apart underneath every car driving across it. Small problems turn into expensive ones, and by the time anyone calls a paving company, the only option left is a full resurface.
Most of this is preventable through routine parking lot services running on a regular schedule. The work is not glamorous, but it adds years to the lot’s lifespan and avoids the slip-and-fall liability that comes with a deteriorated surface.
Below are six parking lot services most property owners overlook entirely.
A small crack in the asphalt looks like nothing the first time it appears. Water finds its way within weeks, freezes inside it during winter, and the crack widens with every freeze-thaw cycle.
Warning signs a lot need crack sealing now:
Crack sealing applied early costs a fraction of what a full repave does later.
Sealcoating is the protective layer applied over the asphalt surface every two to three years. It blocks UV damage, prevents oil and chemical penetration, and gives the lot back its fresh black appearance.
What sealcoating actually delivers:
Faded parking lines do more than look unprofessional. Worn striping creates safety hazards, causes parking disputes, and can put the property in violation of accessibility law.
Most commercial lots need restriping every two to three years, depending on traffic volume and exposure to the sun. Fresh lines guide vehicles, improve safety, and make the lot look maintained.
Accessibility regulations change over time, and old striping may not meet current ADA standards. The number of accessible spaces, van-accessible widths, and access aisle requirements has all evolved since most lots were originally painted.
A lot of ADA compliance is open to lawsuits and federal penalties. Updated striping during the same restriping cycle is the cheapest way to stay current with the law.
Water is the single biggest enemy of asphalt. A lot with failing drains, broken catch basins, or pooling water deteriorates much faster than a lot draining properly.
Most property owners never look at the drainage system until a flood happens. Catch basin grates rust out, underground pipes clog with debris, and runoff starts undermining the asphalt from below.
Repairing the drainage early stops the damage at its source. The same problem ignored for years usually ends in a full asphalt failure across whatever section was getting flooded.
A small pothole in October becomes a large pothole by March. Freeze-thaw cycles, snowplows, and water infiltration all accelerate the damage through the winter months.
The standard repair uses fresh asphalt heated and compacted into the hole. Lasts the longest and matches the surrounding pavement well when done properly.
A temporary repair using pre-mixed asphalt poured straight from the bag. Works in cold weather when hot mix is unavailable, but does not last as long.
A specialized technique is reheating the existing asphalt around the hole and blending it with fresh material. Creates a seamless repair with no visible patch line.
A complete excavation and rebuild is used when the base underneath has failed. The most expensive option, but the only real fix for severe damage.
Concrete elements around the parking lot deteriorate alongside the asphalt itself. Curbs crack, sidewalks heave, and wheel stops break apart from years of impact and weather.
Common concrete repairs paired with parking lot work:
Most paving companies handle concrete work as part of the same project. Combining the two saves on mobilization costs and gets the whole lot back to a finished condition at once.
A quick walk around the parking lot reveals most of what needs attention. Cracks, faded paint, pooling water, broken concrete, and rough surface areas all give themselves away to anyone looking.
A proper assessment from a paving company adds the technical layer. They can measure crack depth, check the asphalt thickness, test the base, and pull the drainage records to identify what is causing the visible problems.
Most lots need a mix of services rather than just one. Combining crack sealing, sealcoating, and restriping in the same visit is the most cost-effective approach for a lot that has been neglected for a few years.
How often should a commercial parking lot be sealcoated?
Most lots need sealcoating every two to three years. High-traffic lots in sunny climates may need it more often, while shaded or low-traffic lots can stretch the interval slightly longer.
Is crack sealing worth it for small cracks?
Yes, small cracks are the cheapest stage to repair, and ignoring them is what leads to potholes, base failure, and eventual full resurfacing. Sealing early extends the lot’s life significantly.
What is the ADA compliance risk on parking lot striping?
Properties with non-compliant striping can face federal lawsuits, fines, and forced retrofits. The number of accessible spaces, the width of van-accessible spots, and the access aisle layout all have to meet current ADA standards.
Can all of these services be done at the same time?
Yes, a qualified paving company can coordinate crack sealing, sealcoating, striping, patching, and drainage work in a single project. Combining services reduces mobilization costs and minimizes disruption to the business.
A commercial parking lot is a working asset that needs regular care. Crack sealing stops damage before it spreads, while sealcoating protects the surface from UV exposure and chemicals. Restriping keeps the lot safe and ADA-compliant, drainage repair prevents water damage, pothole patching catches winter damage early, and concrete repair keeps curbs and walkways in shape. Skipping these services is what turns a lot worth maintaining into one that has to be torn up and replaced.
Coordinating six different parking lot services across multiple vendors is a logistical headache no property owner needs. Satterfield Paving runs all of them out of one Durham operation, with the same crew handling each service. Crack sealing, sealcoating, striping, drainage, patching, and curb repair all sit under one schedule. Their work has been held up across the Triangle for decades with full license and insurance standards.
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