
Linear Corpus Christi Asphalt Paving delivers asphalt paving contractor services in Aransas Pass, TX, including asphalt resurfacing, pothole repair, and drainage work built to handle salt air, storm flooding, and coastal heat. We have served this region since 2019, and our crews know what Gulf Coast conditions do to pavement on properties near Conn Brown Harbor and along the Highway 35 and Highway 361 corridors.

Salt air off the bay and the relentless South Texas sun break down asphalt binders faster in Aransas Pass than almost anywhere else in the region, and many driveways and lots reach the resurfacing threshold sooner than owners expect. Our asphalt resurfacing lays a new overlay over a structurally sound base, restoring the surface at a fraction of full replacement cost and using a mix selected for Gulf Coast heat and humidity.
Storm surge and heavy tropical rainfall during hurricane season push water under pavement through any crack or low spot, accelerating base failure and pothole formation on Aransas Pass properties. Quick pothole repair with hot-mix asphalt stops that water infiltration and prevents one damaged section from spreading across an entire driveway or lot.
Much of Aransas Pass sits near sea level in FEMA-designated flood zones, and standing water on or around a paved surface after a storm is one of the fastest ways to destroy a base layer. Proper surface grading, channel drains, and catch basin installation give water a defined path off the property before it can undermine any pavement.
A fresh sealcoat acts as a barrier against the salt-laden air that moves through Aransas Pass year-round, slowing the oxidation that turns smooth asphalt into a brittle, cracked surface. Coastal properties here genuinely need sealcoating every two years to stay ahead of the accelerated weathering that comes with living this close to the bays.
In a coastal flood zone, even a hairline crack in a driveway or parking lot is an opening for storm water to penetrate and erode the aggregate base beneath. Sealing cracks before hurricane season starts is one of the most cost-effective things an Aransas Pass property owner can do to protect their pavement investment heading into a wet summer.
Homes near Conn Brown Harbor and along the waterfront channels often sit on lots where the original grade was set decades ago without modern flood-routing in mind. Regrading a property to direct water away from structures and paved surfaces is a foundational step before any new paving project makes sense in a low-lying coastal location like this one.
Aransas Pass is a small coastal city of roughly 9,000 to 10,000 people, bordered by Corpus Christi Bay, Redfish Bay, and Aransas Bay. That waterfront position is what makes it a great place to live - and what makes asphalt paving here harder than it is in an inland city. Salt air moves through the area constantly, attacking asphalt binders and causing surfaces to oxidize and crack years sooner than they would 30 miles inland. The city straddles San Patricio and Nueces counties, and large portions of the residential areas fall within FEMA-designated flood zones. Storm surge from Gulf hurricanes and heavy tropical rainfall can leave standing water on driveways and parking lots for hours, which accelerates base failure in any pavement that was not installed with proper drainage and base depth.
The housing stock in Aransas Pass runs from older mid-20th-century wood-frame and pier-and-beam homes close to the water to more recent concrete-slab construction in inland neighborhoods. Properties near the port and ship channel carry commercial and light industrial traffic tied to the shrimping fleet and marine supply businesses, meaning roads in those zones take heavy wear beyond what a typical residential street sees. Any contractor working here needs to understand how to select a hot-mix asphalt that can handle both the coastal climate and the traffic demands of a working waterfront community. Contractors who treat this like an inland South Texas job consistently underdeliver because they skip the drainage preparation and base depth that coastal conditions require.
Our crew works throughout Aransas Pass regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect asphalt paving work here. The mix of pier-and-beam homes near the waterfront and slab-on-grade construction further from the bays means we encounter a wide range of site conditions on the same street. Properties near the port and Conn Brown Harbor often have paving surfaces that carry boat trailer and heavy truck traffic, which calls for a thicker asphalt cross-section than a standard residential driveway. We account for that in every project estimate.
The two main roads in and out of Aransas Pass - State Highway 35 running north to south and State Highway 361 running toward the ferry crossing at Redfish Bay - define how the city is connected to the broader region. We move equipment along both routes regularly and are familiar with the neighborhoods that spread out on either side. Aransas Pass is a point of civic pride for residents who work in the shrimping trade and marine services that have shaped the city for generations, and we respect that local identity when we work in the area. For permit questions specific to the city, the City of Aransas Pass handles local permitting and public works inquiries.
We serve the communities close to Aransas Pass as well. If your property is in Rockport to the north on Highway 35 or in Ingleside across the bay, we cover those areas as part of our regular service territory throughout the Coastal Bend.
Reach us by phone at (361) 260-1127 or through our online contact form. We reply within one business day and schedule your free on-site estimate at a time that works for you.
We visit your Aransas Pass property, assess the existing surface, check the base condition and drainage, and walk you through what the project requires and what it will cost. There is no charge for the estimate and no obligation to proceed.
Once you approve the estimate, we schedule the work and confirm the date with you in advance. Our crew arrives on time with the right equipment for the specific job - resurfacing, crack sealing, drainage work, or a full paving install.
We complete the job, clean up the site, and walk you through the finished work before we leave. We let you know the cure time before the surface sees traffic and answer any follow-up questions you have about maintenance.
We serve Aransas Pass and the surrounding Coastal Bend communities. Free estimates, no obligation, and a reply within one business day.
(361) 260-1127Aransas Pass is a small Texas Gulf Coast city at the intersection of three bays - Corpus Christi Bay, Redfish Bay, and Aransas Bay - making it one of the most water-surrounded municipalities in South Texas. The city is best known for its commercial shrimping fleet, centered on Conn Brown Harbor, and the annual Shrimporee festival that draws visitors from across the region. The Lydia Ann Channel separates the city from the barrier island, and the free state-operated ferry at the end of Highway 361 connects residents to Port Aransas. The working waterfront character of the city shapes its property mix - commercial and industrial uses near the port blend with older residential neighborhoods that spread inland toward the Highway 35 corridor.
The residential stock in Aransas Pass is a mix of mid-20th-century homes on smaller lots near the water, many of them pier-and-beam or elevated construction to manage flood risk, and more conventional slab homes in the neighborhoods further from the bays. The area closest to the commercial fishing harbor has seen decades of heavy truck and trailer traffic that wears on paved surfaces faster than residential use alone. Communities nearby include Ingleside across Corpus Christi Bay and Portland to the south, both of which we also serve as part of our Coastal Bend service area.
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Learn MoreSalt air and storm seasons are hard on asphalt - call us today for a free estimate before hurricane season puts more stress on your pavement.