Asphalt Mill and Pave in Colorado Springs, CO

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Asphalt Mill and Pave in Colorado Springs, CO

Scheduling asphalt milling and paving in Colorado Springs through Asphalt Coatings Company delivers a cost-effective alternative to full-depth replacement. ACC mills deteriorated asphalt to a specified depth using cold milling machines, applies a tack coat for proper layer adhesion, and overlays with commercial-grade hot mix asphalt compacted to CDOT density specifications, preserving the existing aggregate base while restoring ride quality, drainage slope, and surface integrity across parking lots, access roads, and community streets throughout the Colorado Springs metro area. Every mill and pave project starts with a free on-site assessment where an ACC project manager evaluates your pavement structure, identifies whether surface distress originates from the asphalt layer or the base below, and determines the correct milling depth and overlay thickness for your specific conditions. ACC has milled and paved commercial surfaces across Colorado Springs since 1986, over 40 years of working in Colorado’s freeze-thaw climate means our crews understand how 120+ annual freeze-thaw cycles, 6,035-foot UV intensity, and expansive clay soils affect milling depth selection, tack coat application rates, and hot mix asphalt overlay compaction. Mill and overlay projects preserve the existing base investment, correct cross-slope drainage issues, restore curb reveal heights, and deliver a new riding surface at 40–60% of the cost of full-depth reconstruction. ACC handles projects from 5,000 sq ft parking lot overlays to 200,000+ sq ft commercial resurfacing across Colorado Springs, Fountain, Security-Widefield, Pueblo, Monument, Woodland Park, Canon City, Manitou Springs, Black Forest, and Falcon.
  • Since 1986
  • 4.7/5 Rating
  • Licensed & Insured
  • Free Estimates
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Asphalt Milling and Paving by Application in Colorado Springs

ACC mills and paves commercial surfaces across three primary application categories. Each requires different milling depths, overlay thicknesses, and traffic management strategies. ACC tailors every mill and overlay specification to the property type and traffic loading.

Parking Lot Mill and Pave in Colorado Springs

ACC mills and paves commercial parking lots across the Colorado Springs metro area to restore deteriorated surfaces without removing the existing base structure. Parking lot milling typically removes 1.5 to 2 inches of oxidized, cracked asphalt using a cold milling machine that profiles the surface to the correct cross-slope for drainage. ACC then applies a tack coat to bond the new layer and places 1.5 to 2 inches of hot mix asphalt overlay compacted with steel-drum vibratory rollers. The milled and paved surface restores curb reveal, corrects ponding issues, and provides a uniform riding surface. All while preserving the existing base investment.

Full Lot Mill & Overlay

ACC mills the entire parking lot surface to a uniform depth and overlays with fresh hot mix asphalt for a completely renewed surface with corrected drainage.


  • 1.5–2 inch milling depth (standard)

  • Tack coat application for layer bonding

  • Hot mix asphalt overlay to match grade

  • Cross-slope correction for drainage

  • Smooth transitions at curbs & structures

Free on-site estimate

Partial Mill & Pave (Zones)

ACC mills and paves only the deteriorated zones of your parking lot (drive lanes, high-traffic areas, or sections with alligator cracking) while leaving sound areas untouched.

  • Targeted milling of failed zones only

  • Feathered transitions to existing surface
  • Lower cost than full-lot resurfacing

  • Phased approach for budget management
  • Minimal business disruption

Free on-site estimate

Profile Correction Overlay

ACC uses variable-depth milling to correct drainage issues, eliminate ponding, and restore proper cross-slope before overlaying with hot mix asphalt.


  • Variable-depth cold milling for grade correction

  • Eliminates ponding & standing water
  • Restores 2% cross-slope for drainage

  • Maintains curb reveal heights

  • Engineered overlay thickness

Free on-site estimate

Road & Access Lane Milling and Overlay in Colorado Springs

ACC mills and paves commercial access roads, drive lanes, and private roadways that handle heavy truck traffic across the Colorado Springs metro area. Road milling and paving requires deeper milling depths (2–3 inches) and thicker overlays than standard parking lots because commercial vehicles impose higher axle loads on the pavement structure. ACC uses cold milling machines equipped with carbide-tipped cutting drums that remove deteriorated asphalt while maintaining grade control for proper crown and drainage. The milled surface receives a tack coat and heavy-duty hot mix asphalt overlay designed to withstand repeated truck loading without rutting or shoving.

Commercial Access Road Mill & Pave

ACC mills and resurfaces access roads at industrial parks, distribution centers, and commercial developments with heavy-duty asphalt designed for truck traffic.


  • 2–3 inch milling depth for roads

  • Heavy-duty hot mix asphalt overlay

  • Crown restoration for road drainage
  • Curb & gutter transition matching
  • CDOT specification compliance

Free on-site estimate

Drive Lane Resurfacing

ACC mills and overlays high-traffic drive lanes in parking lots and commercial sites where turning movements and heavy loads cause accelerated surface wear.


  • Targeted drive lane milling

  • Rut-resistant asphalt mix design

  • Seamless transitions to adjacent areas

  • Traffic control during operations

  • Night & weekend work available

Free on-site estimate

Industrial Yard Resurfacing

ACC mills and paves industrial yards, loading dock approaches, and trailer staging areas where heavy axle loads demand thicker overlay sections and rut-resistant mix designs.

  • 3-inch milling for heavy-duty areas

  • Polymer-modified asphalt for rut resistance

  • Dock approach grade matching


  • Engineered for 80,000 lb axle loads

  • Phased work to maintain operations

Free on-site estimate

HOA Community Milling and Paving in Colorado Springs

ACC has milled and paved HOA community roadways and parking areas across the Colorado Springs metro area for over 40 years. HOA asphalt resurfacing requires careful coordination, resident notification, phased work schedules that maintain access to homes, mailbox and utility protection, and budget alignment with reserve study projections. ACC provides HOA boards with a detailed assessment of every road segment, prioritizes sections by condition severity, and designs a phased mill and overlay plan that spreads costs across multiple budget years while addressing the worst areas first. Most HOA community roads require 1.5–2 inch milling depth with a matching hot mix asphalt overlay.

HOA Roadway Mill & Overlay

ACC mills and resurfaces internal community roads with coordinated resident access, phased scheduling, and reserve-study-aligned budgeting for HOA boards.


  • 1.5–2 inch milling & overlay

  • Resident notification & access plan

  • Phased approach for budget alignment
  • Mailbox & utility protection

  • Board presentation & reserve study support

Free on-site estimate

HOA Parking Area Resurfacing

ACC mills and paves shared parking areas, guest parking, and garage aprons in HOA communities, restoring surface quality and ADA compliance across common areas.


  • Guest & resident lot resurfacing
  • Garage apron grade matching

  • ADA-compliant transitions


  • Speed bump & signage integration
  • Re-striping after overlay

Free on-site estimate

Multi-Year Resurfacing Plans

ACC develops phased milling and paving plans that spread HOA resurfacing costs across 3–5 years, prioritizing the worst road segments while maintaining overall community appearance.

  • Segment-by-segment condition assessment

  • Priority ranking by pavement condition

  • Annual budget projections
  • Reserve study alignment

  • Board-ready proposal documents

Free on-site estimate

When to Mill and Pave vs Other Asphalt Solutions

Not every deteriorating surface needs milling and resurfacing. ACC diagnoses the root cause of pavement failure and recommends the most cost-effective solution. Whether that means mill and pave, full-depth replacement, or preventive maintenance. Choosing the wrong approach wastes money and shortens pavement life.

Widespread Surface Cracking with Sound Base

Diagnosis: The asphalt surface shows interconnected cracking, oxidation, and raveling, but the underlying aggregate base remains structurally sound. Core samples reveal intact base material without moisture damage or void formation. This condition indicates the asphalt layer has reached the end of its service life while the base still supports traffic loads.

Right Solution: Mill and pave: remove deteriorated surface, preserve base, overlay with new HMA

Drainage & Ponding Issues (Surface Origin)

Diagnosis: Standing water collects in low spots caused by surface settling, paver joint irregularities, or original grade errors. Not base failure. The base material beneath the ponding areas is still compacted and intact. Variable-depth milling corrects the cross-slope without removing the entire pavement structure.

Right Solution: Profile correction mill and overlay: variable-depth milling restores proper drainage grade

Alligator Cracking with Base Failure

Diagnosis: Fatigue cracking extends through the full asphalt depth, and probing reveals soft, saturated, or void-filled base material beneath. Colorado Springs’ freeze-thaw cycles have pushed water through cracks into the base, eroding the aggregate and creating structural failure. Milling and overlaying over a failed base produces a new surface that will crack again within 2–3 years.

Right Solution: Full-depth replacement, remove asphalt and failed base, rebuild from subgrade up

Subgrade Movement & Heaving

Diagnosis: The pavement exhibits heaving, depression, or undulation caused by expansive clay soils beneath the aggregate base. Colorado Springs’ bentonite clay soils expand when wet and contract when dry, creating seasonal movement that no asphalt overlay can accommodate. Milling and paving over an unstable subgrade produces a smooth surface that will deform within one to two freeze-thaw seasons.

Right Solution: Full-depth reconstruction with subgrade stabilization or geotextile reinforcement

Early-Stage Cracking Without Structural Damage

Diagnosis: The pavement shows linear cracking (longitudinal or transverse) from thermal contraction, but no interconnected alligator patterns, no base failure, and no surface raveling. The cracks are less than 1/2 inch wide and the asphalt surface is still flexible and bonded to the base. This pavement has years of remaining life if the cracks are sealed before water infiltrates.

Right Solution: Crack sealing + sealcoating, far less expensive than milling and preserves existing surface

Isolated Pothole & Patch Failures

Diagnosis: The parking lot has 10–20 potholes or failed patches concentrated in specific areas, but 80%+ of the surface remains structurally sound. The failures correlate with drainage paths, dumpster pads, or drive lane turning areas. Not widespread base failure. Milling the entire lot to fix isolated failures wastes money on areas that do not need resurfacing.

Right Solution: Saw-cut full-depth patching of failed areas + crack seal + sealcoat remaining surface

Mill and Pave vs Full Replacement vs Crack Seal + Sealcoat

Choosing between asphalt milling and overlay, full-depth replacement, and preventive maintenance depends on base condition, budget, and expected pavement life. ACC recommends the approach that delivers the longest pavement life per dollar spent.

FactorMill & Pave (Overlay)Full-Depth ReplacementCrack Seal + Sealcoat
When AppropriateSurface failure, sound baseBase failure, subgrade issuesEarly-stage cracking only
Expected Life12–20 years20–30 yearsExtends 3–5 years
Disruption Duration3–7 days typical2–4 weeks1–2 days
Base PreservationPreserves existing baseRemoves & rebuilds baseNo structural work
Drainage CorrectionCross-slope correction possibleFull regrading possibleNo grade changes
Recycled Material (RAP)Milled material recycled into new mixAll material recycledNo material removal
Best ForMost commercial parking lotsSeverely failed pavementsNewer pavements, preventive care

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Mill and Pave Projects Completed in Colorado Springs

ACC has milled and paved commercial surfaces across the Colorado Springs metro area for over 40 years. These projects demonstrate how a diagnostic approach to asphalt milling produces measurable results, longer pavement life, lower total cost, and preserved base investments.

Retail Center Parking Lot. Aurora, CO

Condition: A 75,000 sq ft retail parking lot exhibited widespread transverse cracking, surface raveling, and ponding in three low-spot areas. The property manager had received bids for full-depth replacement ranging from $350,000–$450,000. ACC’s assessment revealed the aggregate base was structurally sound across 95% of the lot, only the asphalt surface had deteriorated from UV oxidation and deferred crack sealing.

ACC Solution: ACC milled the entire surface to 2-inch depth using a cold milling machine, corrected the three ponding areas with variable-depth milling to restore 2% cross-slope, applied tack coat, and overlaid with 2 inches of commercial-grade hot mix asphalt. ACC then sealcoated the perimeter and re-striped all 280 parking stalls with ADA-compliant markings. Total cost was 55% less than full replacement, and the milled and paved surface carries a 15–20 year expected life with proper maintenance.

Result: 75,000 sq ft resurfaced • 55% cost savings • Ponding eliminated • 280 stalls re-striped

HOA Community Roadways. Centennial, CO

Condition: An HOA community with 1.8 miles of internal roads had deteriorating asphalt with widespread cracking and surface raveling. The HOA board had deferred maintenance for 6 years, and two previous contractors recommended full reconstruction at $650,000+. The board needed a solution that fit their reserve fund budget of $280,000.

ACC Solution: ACC’s segment-by-segment assessment identified that 80% of the road network had sound base conditions. ACC designed a two-phase plan: Phase 1, full-depth patching of the 20% with base failure ($45,000), followed by crack sealing the entire network ($15,000). Phase 2, mill and overlay of the worst 60% of road segments ($195,000). The remaining 20% received sealcoating ($25,000). Total cost: $280,000, within the reserve fund budget and $370,000 less than reconstruction.

Result: 1.8 miles resurfaced • $370K saved vs reconstruction • 12+ year expected life

Industrial Access Road. Commerce City, CO

Condition: A 40,000 sq ft industrial access road serving a distribution center had developed severe rutting in the truck turning areas and longitudinal cracking along the wheel paths. Semi-trailer traffic (200+ movements per day) had worn the surface layer beyond serviceable condition, though the heavy-duty base remained intact beneath the deteriorated asphalt.

ACC Solution: ACC milled the entire access road to 3-inch depth, placed a tack coat, and overlaid with 3 inches of polymer-modified hot mix asphalt designed for heavy truck loading. ACC specified a rut-resistant mix with higher aggregate angularity and polymer-modified binder to prevent the shoving and rutting that had damaged the original surface. The work was completed over two weekends to maintain weekday truck operations.

Result: 40,000 sq ft milled & paved • Zero operational downtime • Rut-resistant overlay

Office Park Parking Lot. Lakewood, CO

Condition: A 50,000 sq ft office park parking lot had reached 18 years of age with significant oxidation, block cracking, and multiple failed patches from previous years of reactive repair. The property management company wanted to restore the lot’s appearance and eliminate the recurring $10,000–$15,000 annual repair bills.

ACC Solution: ACC milled the surface to 1.5-inch depth, removed and patched 8 areas of base failure with full-depth repairs, applied tack coat, and overlaid with 1.5 inches of hot mix asphalt. ACC followed the overlay with two-coat sealcoating (applied 14 months post-paving) and full re-striping with optimized stall layout that added 12 parking spaces. The mill-and-pave investment replaced recurring annual repair spending with a single project carrying 15+ year expected life.

Result: 50,000 sq ft resurfaced • 12 stalls added • Annual repair costs eliminated

Why Colorado Springs Property Managers Choose ACC for Asphalt Milling and Paving

Selecting a mill and pave contractor in Colorado Springs requires evaluating equipment capability, climate expertise, and diagnostic accuracy. ACC delivers on all six factors that determine whether your milled and paved surface lasts 12 years or 20.

Cold Milling Machines & Commercial Pavers

ACC owns cold milling machines with carbide-tipped cutting drums that remove asphalt to a precise, uniform depth. Our commercial pavers place hot mix asphalt at controlled thickness and temperature, and steel-drum vibratory rollers compact the overlay to CDOT density specifications. Residential-grade equipment cannot achieve the profile accuracy or compaction density that commercial mill and overlay projects require.

40 Years of Colorado Springs Freeze-Thaw Expertise

ACC has milled and paved surfaces through 40+ Colorado Springs winters. Our crews understand how 120+ annual freeze-thaw cycles affect tack coat adhesion, overlay compaction timing, and joint construction. Surfaces that were milled and paved by ACC in the 1990s are still performing because the original specifications accounted for Colorado’s thermal cycling. Not generic national standards.

Free On-Site Pavement Assessment

Every mill and pave project begins with a free on-site visit where an ACC project manager probes the pavement structure, identifies whether surface distress originates from the asphalt or the base, and determines the correct milling depth and overlay thickness. ACC delivers a detailed written scope with transparent pricing within 48 hours. No pressure, no obligation.

Recycled Asphalt Pavement (RAP) Integration

ACC recycles 100% of the milled asphalt material. The cold milling machine grinds the removed asphalt into recycled asphalt pavement (RAP) that gets transported to the hot mix plant and incorporated into new asphalt mixes. This reduces raw material consumption, lowers project costs, and keeps thousands of tons of milled material out of Colorado Springs-area landfills each year.

Diagnostic-First Approach

ACC diagnoses whether your pavement needs milling and resurfacing, full-depth replacement, or preventive maintenance before recommending a scope of work. Milling and overlaying over a failed base wastes the entire investment. ACC identifies base condition through visual assessment, probing, and core sampling when necessary, then prescribes the solution that delivers the longest life per dollar spent.

Two Colorado Locations, Fast Mobilization

ACC operates from Aurora (16275 E 2nd Ave) and Colorado Springs (4740 Forge Rd STE 110B), positioning cold milling machines and paving crews within 30 minutes of most Colorado Springs metro commercial properties. Local crews mean faster mobilization, lower transport costs, and familiarity with municipal permitting and traffic control requirements across Colorado Springs, Aurora, Lakewood, and surrounding jurisdictions.

How the Mill and Pave Process Works with ACC

From your first call to the final compaction pass, ACC follows five steps to ensure your milled and paved surface delivers maximum life. Each step addresses a specific technical requirement that determines long-term overlay performance.

1

Assessment & Core Sampling

ACC visits your property, evaluates surface distress, probes base conditions, and determines whether mill and pave is the correct solution. Core samples verify base integrity when visual assessment is inconclusive.

2

Cold Milling

ACC’s cold milling machine removes the deteriorated asphalt surface to a specified depth (1.5–3 inches), creating a textured profile that promotes tack coat adhesion. The milled material (RAP) is loaded into trucks for recycling.

3

Tack Coat Application

ACC applies a tack coat of asphalt emulsion to the milled surface. The tack coat creates a bonding layer between the existing base and the new overlay, preventing delamination under traffic loading and freeze-thaw cycling.

4

Hot Mix Asphalt Overlay

ACC’s commercial paver places hot mix asphalt at the specified thickness and temperature. Steel-drum vibratory rollers compact the overlay to CDOT density specifications while the mix is still within the compaction temperature window.

5

Final Inspection & Striping

ACC walks the completed surface with you, verifies grade, drainage, and transitions at curbs and structures, and coordinates re-striping of parking stalls, fire lanes, and ADA markings on the new surface.

Ready to Mill and Pave Your Parking Lot or Road?

ACC provides free on-site pavement assessments to determine whether mill and overlay is the right solution for your property. Detailed written proposals delivered within 48 hours.

Properties ACC Mills and Paves Across Colorado Springs

ACC mills and resurfaces asphalt for commercial, industrial, and residential community properties across the Colorado Springs metro area. Each property type requires different milling specifications, overlay designs, and traffic management approaches.

Retail Centers

Office Parks

Industrial & Distribution

HOA Communities

Hotels & Hospitality

Healthcare Facilities

Schools & Universities

Churches & Nonprofits

Municipal & Government

Auto Dealerships

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CLIENT FEEDBACK

Real reviews from commercial property managers, HOA boards, and business owners across Colorado.

Frequently Asked Questions About Asphalt Mill and Pave in Colorado Springs

Answers to common questions from Colorado Springs property managers, HOA boards, and business owners evaluating asphalt milling and resurfacing for their commercial properties.

Asphalt milling uses a cold milling machine equipped with a rotating cutting drum studded with carbide-tipped teeth. The machine removes the deteriorated asphalt surface to a specified depth (typically 1.5 to 3 inches) while maintaining precise grade control. The milled material (called recycled asphalt pavement or RAP) is loaded into dump trucks and transported to a hot mix plant for recycling. After milling, ACC applies a tack coat of asphalt emulsion to the exposed surface, then places a new hot mix asphalt overlay using a commercial paver. Steel-drum vibratory rollers compact the overlay to CDOT density specifications. The result is a new riding surface bonded to the existing base structure.


Milling depth depends on the application and condition of the existing asphalt. Standard parking lot milling removes 1.5 to 2 inches of surface material. Commercial road and drive lane milling typically requires 2 to 3 inches to address deeper deterioration from heavy vehicle loading. Variable-depth milling is used when ACC needs to correct cross-slope or eliminate ponding areas. ACC determines the correct milling depth during the free on-site assessment based on pavement thickness, base condition, and the overlay thickness needed to achieve the target finished grade.

Tack coat is an asphalt emulsion sprayed onto the milled surface before the hot mix overlay is placed. It creates a bonding agent between the existing pavement and the new overlay layer. Without proper tack coat application, the overlay can delaminate (separate from the surface below) under traffic loading, especially during Colorado Springs’ freeze-thaw cycles when water infiltrates the interface between layers. ACC applies tack coat at the correct application rate and allows it to break (cure from brown to black) before placing the overlay. This step is critical to long-term overlay performance and is often skipped or improperly applied by less experienced contractors.

ACC recycles 100% of the milled asphalt material. The cold milling machine grinds the removed asphalt into small granules called recycled asphalt pavement (RAP). This material is transported to hot mix asphalt plants where it is incorporated into new asphalt mixes, typically comprising 15–30% of the new mix by weight. Recycling milled material reduces the need for virgin aggregate and liquid asphalt cement, lowers project costs, and is environmentally responsible. In some cases, milled RAP material can also be used as aggregate base course material for other construction projects.

Several factors determine the cost of a mill and pave project in Colorado Springs. Milling depth directly affects cost, deeper milling (3 inches vs 1.5 inches) requires more machine time and produces more material to haul. Overlay thickness affects material cost, each additional half-inch of hot mix asphalt adds approximately $0.50–$0.75 per square foot. Project size affects unit cost, larger projects have lower per-square-foot costs because equipment mobilization costs are spread across more area. Site access affects cost if equipment staging is limited or if haul distances to the hot mix plant are excessive. The number of utility adjustments (manholes, valve boxes, catch basins) adds cost. Traffic control requirements vary by location and municipality. ACC accounts for all of these factors in the free on-site assessment and provides transparent, itemized pricing in the written proposal.

Asphalt mill and pave costs in Colorado Springs typically range from $2 to $5 per square foot, depending on milling depth, overlay thickness, project size, site access conditions, and traffic control requirements. A 50,000 sq ft parking lot mill and overlay at 2-inch depth with a 2-inch overlay typically costs $100,000–$200,000. Costs decrease on a per-square-foot basis as project size increases due to equipment mobilization efficiencies. ACC provides free on-site assessments with detailed written proposals that include itemized pricing for milling, tack coat, overlay, and any additional work such as patching, striping, or concrete repairs.

Yes. Mill and pave typically costs 40–60% less than full-depth replacement because it preserves the existing aggregate base structure. Full-depth replacement requires removing all asphalt and base material, regrading the subgrade, installing new aggregate base (6–8 inches), and placing new asphalt, roughly $5–$10 per square foot. However, milling and overlaying over a failed base is a waste of money because the overlay will crack within 2–3 years. ACC’s free assessment determines base condition so you invest in the right approach. If the base is sound, mill and pave saves 40–60%. If the base has failed, full replacement delivers better long-term value.

ACC works with property managers and HOA boards to structure phased mill and pave projects that spread costs across multiple budget years. Rather than milling and resurfacing an entire property in one phase, ACC can prioritize the most deteriorated areas in Year 1, address moderate areas in Year 2, and complete remaining sections in Year 3. This phased approach aligns with reserve study budgets for HOAs and capital expenditure planning for commercial property managers. Contact ACC at (720) 526-3240 to discuss phased project options for your property.

Curb and gutter replacement in Denver typically costs $20–$35 per linear foot depending on curb type (vertical vs. rolled), accessibility, demolition scope, subgrade condition, and DOTI permit requirements. ADA curb ramp construction costs $1,500–$4,000 per ramp depending on complexity and site constraints. Valley pan (V-pan) replacement runs $25–$40 per linear foot. These ranges reflect standard conditions, unusual subgrade problems, root removal, or utility conflicts can affect pricing. ACC provides free on-site assessments with detailed written proposals that include per-linear-foot pricing, so you know exactly what each section costs before work begins.

Project timelines for curb and gutter work in Denver depend on scope: 50–100 linear feet of curb replacement typically takes 2–3 days (1 day demolition/prep, 1 day pour, plus curing). 200–500 linear feet takes 4–7 days. 1,000+ linear feet takes 2–3 weeks. ADA curb ramp construction takes 1–2 days per ramp. All timelines include DOTI permit coordination. Concrete requires 7 days minimum curing before traffic loading, so ACC schedules pours to minimize disruption to property access. The optimal concrete pouring season in Denver runs from April through November when temperatures support proper curing.


Yes. ACC handles all DOTI (Denver Department of Transportation and Infrastructure) permit requirements for curb and gutter work in the public right-of-way. This includes permit applications, utility locate coordination (811), traffic control plans, inspection scheduling, and post-construction documentation. DOTI requires permits for any excavation or concrete work within Denver’s right-of-way, and the permit process includes pre-construction and post-construction inspections to verify the work meets Denver standards. ACC’s permit handling is included in the project scope, there’s no separate charge for permit management.

The ideal season for curb and gutter work in Denver runs from April through November when daytime temperatures consistently stay above 50 degrees F and nighttime temperatures stay above 40 degrees F. Concrete requires these temperature ranges for proper hydration and curing. Pouring concrete in freezing conditions risks early-age freeze damage that weakens the curb before it reaches design strength. ACC monitors weather forecasts before every pour and uses blanket curing during shoulder-season pours when overnight temperatures may drop near freezing. For emergency curb repairs during winter months, ACC uses accelerated-set concrete mixes and heated curing blankets to achieve adequate strength development.

Asphalt Mill and Pave Service Areas in Colorado Springs

ACC mills and paves commercial asphalt surfaces across the entire Colorado Springs, Pueblo, and the southern Front Range from our Aurora headquarters. Our crews have completed mill and overlay projects in every major Colorado Springs metro community.

Denver

Aurora

Lakewood

Arvada

Westminster

Thornton

Centennial

Highlands Ranch

Littleton

Parker

Castle Rock

Commerce City

Broomfield

Englewood

Golden

ACC also serves Colorado Springs and the southern Front Range from our second office location at 4740 Forge Rd STE 110B, Colorado Springs, CO 80907. ACC has milled and paved parking lots, HOA roadways, commercial access roads, and industrial yards in every community listed above. Each area presents unique conditions, from Commerce City’s industrial clay soils to Highlands Ranch’s HOA-governed community standards, and ACC tailors every mill and overlay specification to the site’s soil conditions, traffic loading, drainage requirements, and municipal standards. Commercial properties outside these areas should contact ACC directly at (720) 526-3240 to discuss mill and pave project availability.

Get a Free Mill and Pave Assessment for Your Colorado Springs Property

Asphalt Coatings Company has milled and paved commercial surfaces across Colorado Springs since 1986. Call today for a free on-site assessment and detailed written proposal.