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Site Concrete · ADA Ramps
ADA Ramps & Curb Cuts in Abbotsford
ADA ramps and curb cuts are accessibility code, not optional design. Every slope, every cross-fall, every detectable warning panel has a defined spec, and inspection compares the as-built work against it. Abbotsford Concrete pours ADA ramps and curb cuts to those specs, ties them into adjacent commercial sidewalks and curb and gutter, and documents compliance for the inspector. Every project starts with a free written estimate.
- Slope and cross-fall to code
- Detectable warnings to spec
- Free written estimate, firm schedule
Code is code
What ADA Ramps and Curb Cuts Have to Do
ADA accessibility specs are clear about what a ramp or curb cut must do: a maximum running slope, a maximum cross-slope, a minimum width, detectable warnings (the truncated dome panels) at every flush transition between pedestrian and vehicular surfaces, and level landings at the top and bottom of every ramp run. Hit those specs and the work passes; miss any one of them and it fails inspection.
We design and pour every ADA ramp and curb cut to those specs, with the detectable warning panels embedded properly, the cross-slope verified during the pour rather than estimated after, and the landings sized correctly for the transition. Where the existing site has an out-of-spec ramp or curb cut, we replace it to current code.
Same documentation across our site concrete work and the wider commercial concrete service. Coordinate with adjacent parking lot work where ramps transition to pavement.
How it works
How We Build ADA Ramps in Abbotsford
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Verify the ADA specification
We verify the applicable ADA spec for the project (federal, provincial, or local accessibility code), confirm the slope, cross-slope, width and landing requirements, and identify where detectable warnings are required.
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Excavate ramp to elevation
The ramp footprint is excavated to subgrade, with the start and end elevations confirmed so the running slope hits the ADA max, and the cross-slope footprint is graded into the base.
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Form, embed warnings
Forms are set with the engineered slope and cross-slope, reinforcement placed, detectable warning panels positioned in the form footprint where required, and the ramp transition to adjacent walks or curbs is detailed flush.
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Pour, verify, document
Concrete is placed and finished, slope and cross-slope are verified with a level before cure, the detectable warning panels are confirmed in position, and the as-built dimensions are documented for inspection.
Where ADA work fails
Slope Is What Most ADA Work Misses
The most common ADA failure we are called to remediate is slope, either the running slope is too steep (the ramp came out at higher than the max angle) or the cross-slope drains across the ramp instead of off the side. Both fail inspection and both require demolition and re-pour to fix; you cannot adjust slope on cured concrete — which is why commercial concrete ADA work has to be right the first time.
We verify slope during the pour, not after. A level and a story-pole on every section catch slope errors while the concrete is still workable. The result is a ramp that passes inspection on the first walk-through. Coordinate with adjacent commercial sidewalks so the ramp lands flush at both ends.
Other site concrete services
Compare with Other Site Concrete Services
ADA ramps is one of four site concrete services we offer. See the rest.
Loading Dock Construction & Repair
Engineered loading-dock slabs and aprons sloped to the pit, built to bear truck loads.
Learn moreCommercial Sidewalks
Code-spec commercial walks for property edges, public connections and ADA paths.
Learn moreConcrete Equipment Pads
Engineered pads for HVAC units, generators, transformers and other site equipment.
Learn moreCommon questions
ADA Ramp & Curb Cut Questions, Answered
Slope specs, detectable warnings, landings, and where ADA work is required.
They replaced four non-compliant curb cuts across our retail center. Each one to current ADA spec, detectable warnings cast in, accessibility consultant passed all four first walk-through.
Slope was verified during the pour, not after. They had a level out on every section. The inspector specifically commented on how clean the as-built dimensions were.
Multiple ramp installations during off-hours so the mall stayed open. Coordinated with adjacent sidewalk pours, detectable warnings flush, ADA inspector signed off without a single revision.
ADA ramps at every entrance to our medical building. They knew the accessibility code cold, no improvisation, no surprises at inspection. Compliance was their first concern, not their last.
From the blog
Concrete Guides & Articles
Practical reading on planning, finishes and caring for concrete in Abbotsford.
Ready to start
Get a Free ADA Work Quote
Tell us where the ADA work is required (new build, renovation, remediation) and we will quote to current accessibility spec in writing.
We'll assess on-site and send a written quote within one business day.