Central Virginia · J. Worden & Sons
Charlottesville sits at the foot of the Blue Ridge, and paving here means navigating historic-district sensibilities in Belmont and Woolen Mills, steep-grade driveways in the Pantops and Ragged Mountain fringe, and the base specifications that Albemarle County's expansive red clay demands. We pave residential driveways through Fry's Spring and North Downtown, resurface commercial lots near the Route 29 corridor and Barracks Road, and build long rural approaches for estate properties in Free Union, Earlysville, and along Route 250 West toward Crozet. Urban tight-lot work and rural estate paving call for different specs — and we know which is which.
We build scopes for real performance, not generic estimates. Each project starts with on-site evaluation of base condition, water movement, and traffic demand, then we match the right repair or replacement strategy to protect your budget and curb appeal.
Whether you manage a commercial lot, HOA roads, church parking areas, or a residential driveway, our crews execute with production discipline, clean jobsite standards, and clear communication from estimate to final walkthrough.
Popular Services
Service Area
Local Landmarks We've Worked Around
Local Climate Engineering
Charlottesville averages 35–40 freeze-thaw cycles per year — enough to pump any base that was under-compacted or built too shallow. Albemarle's red-orange clay is expansive: it swells with winter moisture and contracts and cracks in July heat. We build a minimum 6-inch compacted aggregate base on residential driveways and go deeper on estate approaches that carry horse trailers or farm equipment. In Belmont and the Woolen Mills historic corridor, we work to a tight footprint, protect mature trees with root-bridge geogrid, and keep staging off brick-curbed streetscapes.
Charlottesville Paving FAQs
Residential driveways in Charlottesville and Albemarle County typically run $4–$8 per square foot installed, depending on base condition, grade, and access. Steep approaches on the Ragged Mountain fringe or rural estate lanes in Free Union cost more because of the extra grading, drainage, and deeper base required. We provide free written estimates with a line-item breakdown.
Ready to start your Charlottesville project?