Every spring on the North Shore of Illinois, homeowners walk outside and see the same thing — cracks that weren't there last fall, pavers that have shifted, mortar joints that have crumbled, and steps that have moved. It happens every year, and it will keep happening until the root cause is addressed. At National Brick Paver & Stone, we have been repairing and replacing freeze-thaw damaged hardscape across Highland Park, Lake Forest, Glencoe, Deerfield, Northbrook, and the surrounding North Shore communities since 1983. Here is exactly what is happening to your outdoor surfaces every winter — and what to do about it.
What freeze-thaw damage actually is:
Illinois winters subject every outdoor surface to repeated freeze-thaw cycles — sometimes dozens of them in a single season. Water infiltrates cracks, joints, and porous materials. When temperatures drop below freezing, that water expands by approximately 9 percent as it turns to ice. That expansion creates enormous pressure inside the material — enough to crack concrete, push pavers apart, and destroy mortar joints from the inside out. When temperatures rise, the ice melts, the pressure releases, and water infiltrates even deeper into the damage that was just created. The next freeze makes it worse. By spring, what started as a hairline crack has become a structural problem.
What to look for on your property right now:
Walk your patio, driveway, walkways, and steps and look for these specific signs — cracked or spalling concrete surfaces, shifted or sunken pavers, crumbling or missing mortar joints in brick or stone installations, steps that have moved or separated from the adjacent surface, retaining walls that are leaning or showing cracks, and any surface where water is pooling rather than draining away. Every one of these is a freeze-thaw damage indicator that should be assessed before the problem compounds through another season.
Why some installations survive Illinois winters and others don't:
The difference between a hardscape installation that lasts 30 years and one that fails in 3 comes down entirely to base preparation and installation method — not the surface material. Proper excavation depth, correct base material, compacted installation, and adequate drainage are what protect against freeze-thaw damage. An installation built on an inadequate base traps water beneath the surface. That water freezes, expands, and heaves the entire installation from below — no surface material survives this regardless of quality.
At National Brick Paver & Stone we excavate beyond the recommended depth for Illinois freeze-thaw conditions on every project — because minimum standards produce minimum results. Our engineered base system is why our installations across the North Shore stay flat, level, and locked while others shift and fail.
When to repair and when to replace:
Not every freeze-thaw damaged surface needs full replacement. Individual shifted pavers can often be reset if the base beneath them is still sound. Deteriorated mortar joints can be tuck pointed. But if your concrete patio is cracking across multiple areas, if your pavers are shifting in a pattern that suggests base failure, or if your steps have moved structurally — repair is treating symptoms while replacement addresses the cause. We assess every situation honestly and give you a straightforward recommendation.
If your patio, driveway, steps, or walls showed damage this spring — contact National Brick Paver & Stone today for a free assessment. We serve Highland Park, Lake Forest, Glencoe, Deerfield, Northbrook, Winnetka, Wilmette, Glenview, and all surrounding Illinois communities.