What Professional Slab Demolition Actually Involves
There’s a bit more to pulling up a concrete slab than hiring a bloke with a jackhammer. A properly run slab demolition job follows a clear sequence — and every step matters.
Slab Assessment Before Breaking Starts – Before anything gets broken, we assess the slab. Thickness, reinforcement configuration, overall condition — all of it gets checked. A 100mm unreinforced shed slab breaks very differently to a 200mm mesh-and-bar house slab, and the equipment and approach gets matched to what’s actually in front of us.
Services Identification and Isolation – This is the step that gets skipped on poorly run jobs — and it’s the one that causes the most damage. Electrical conduits, plumbing lines, stormwater drainage, and gas services embedded in or running beneath existing slabs are common across established Hervey Bay residential areas. Every one of them needs to be identified and either isolated or protected before breaking commences. We don’t skip this step.
Breaking, Lifting, and Loading – Once the assessment is done and services are confirmed safe, breaking commences using the right equipment for the slab type and site conditions. The slab gets broken into manageable pieces, lifted, and loaded efficiently so the site moves forward rather than sitting as a pile of rubble.
Steel Extraction and Site Cleanup – Reinforcing steel exposed during breaking gets extracted and separated for recycling. Once the concrete is out and the steel is cleared, the site gets a thorough cleanup — leaving it genuinely ready for the next stage, whether that’s a new slab pour, a pool excavation, or a builder’s footing layout.


The Types of Slabs We Demolish Across Hervey Bay
Slab demolition isn’t a one-size-fits-all job. The thickness, reinforcement, size, and access conditions vary enormously depending on what the slab was originally built for — and our experience across Hervey Bay covers the full range.
Site Management and Safety on Hervey Bay Demolition Jobs
Residential slab demolition in a suburban street isn’t the same as working on a cleared commercial site. There are neighbours, fences, gardens, driveways, and in many cases a family still living in the house while the work is being done out the back. Professional site management on a residential demolition job isn’t optional — it’s what separates a crew you’d recommend to your neighbour from one you’d warn them about.
Dust Suppression
Concrete demolition generates significant dust. In a residential setting, that dust travels — onto neighbouring properties, into open windows, and across gardens and vehicles. We use water suppression throughout the breaking process to keep concrete dust under control and protect surrounding properties from the kind of mess that causes neighbourly grief.
Noise Management and Working Hours
Slab demolition is loud. Under Queensland regulations, residential demolition work is subject to acceptable working hours — and we stick to them. No early starts that wake up the street, no running machinery past permitted hours. Hervey Bay is a community people chose to live in for a reason, and we work accordingly.
Protection of Surrounding Structures and Landscaping
Machinery operating in confined suburban backyards needs to be handled carefully. Boundary fences, existing footings, established gardens, and neighbouring structures all need protection during the demolition process. We plan machinery movements before we start and take responsibility for what happens on site while we’re there.
Safe Handling of Exposed Reinforcing Steel
Exposed reo bar on a demolition site is a serious cut and puncture hazard. Protruding steel gets managed and cleared progressively as breaking proceeds — not left scattered across the site for someone to find the hard way.


What Happens to the Concrete and Steel After Demolition
Once the slab is broken up and the site is cleared, there’s still the question of what actually happens to the material that’s been removed. It’s a question more Hervey Bay homeowners and commercial operators are asking — and it’s a fair one.
Broken Concrete Removal and Recycling
Concrete rubble doesn’t just disappear into a skip bin. Broken concrete removed from Hervey Bay demolition sites is transported off site and disposed of in compliance with Queensland waste management requirements. The majority of crushed concrete gets directed to recycling facilities where it’s processed into road base and fill material — a genuinely useful second life for what would otherwise be a significant volume of landfill waste.
For residential clients, this means the job doesn’t end with a pile of broken slab sitting in the backyard waiting for someone to figure out what to do with it. Removal and disposal is part of the service, not an afterthought.
Reinforcing Steel Recycling
Extracted reinforcing steel is separated from the concrete rubble on site and directed to metal recycling rather than general waste disposal. Steel recycling is standard practice on properly run demolition jobs and keeps significant volumes of reusable material out of landfill.
Why This Matters
Both residential and commercial clients increasingly care about where demolition material ends up — and rightly so. Responsible material disposal isn’t just an environmental consideration, it also protects clients from any liability associated with illegal dumping practices that some operators cut corners with. When we remove it from your site, it goes where it’s supposed to go.




Why Hervey Bay Homeowners and Builders Choose Us for Slab Demolition
There’s no shortage of people with a bobcat and a breaker calling themselves demolition contractors across the Fraser Coast. The difference shows up on site — in how the job is planned, how the crew works, and what the place looks like when they leave.
We Assess Before We Break
Every slab demolition job starts with a proper assessment — thickness, reinforcement, condition, and services identification before a single piece of equipment touches the concrete. It’s not the fastest way to start a job, but it’s the right way, and it’s the difference between a clean outcome and an expensive problem mid-demolition.
We’re Properly Equipped for Any Slab Scenario
From large house slabs on knockdown rebuild sites to confined courtyard slabs with no machinery access, we carry the equipment range to handle whatever the site presents. The right tool for the job isn’t just a saying — on a demolition site it’s the difference between a half-day job and a two-day one.
We Know Hervey Bay’s Residential Areas
Established streets in Urangan, Pialba, Torquay, and Eli Waters have their own characteristics — older slabs with unknown reinforcement, services that were laid before proper documentation was standard, tight block access, and neighbours in close proximity. We’ve worked across all of them and we understand what that environment demands from a demolition crew.
We Handle the Full Job
Assessment, breaking, loading, steel extraction, site cleanup, and responsible material disposal — all of it. You don’t project manage our crew. We show up, do the job properly, and leave your site genuinely ready for whatever comes next.
Slab Demolition Hervey Bay — Frequently Asked Questions
How long does slab demolition take in Hervey Bay?
Most residential shed and garage slabs can be demolished and cleared within a single day. Larger jobs — house slabs from knockdown rebuilds, commercial floor slabs, or sites with difficult access — typically run two to three days depending on slab size, thickness, and reinforcement. We’ll give you a realistic timeframe as part of your free assessment before work starts.
Do I need a permit for slab demolition in Hervey Bay?
For standalone slab demolition that isn’t part of a full building demolition, a permit is generally not required. However, if the slab removal is part of a broader demolition project — particularly a full dwelling knockdown — Fraser Coast Regional Council permit requirements will apply. We can talk through what applies to your specific job when we assess the site.
Can you work around existing structures I want to keep?
Yes. Hand-held breakers and diamond sawing equipment allow us to work precisely around footings, boundary fences, existing structures, and retained slab sections you want left intact. We plan machinery movement and breaking sequences specifically to protect what’s staying.
What happens if services are found under the slab?
If services are identified during the pre-demolition assessment, they get isolated or protected before breaking commences. If something unexpected is encountered during the job, work stops, the relevant authority or tradesperson is contacted, and we don’t proceed until it’s safe to do so. It’s the only responsible way to handle it.
Is the concrete taken away as part of the service?
Yes. Broken concrete rubble and extracted reinforcing steel are both removed from site and disposed of responsibly as part of the demolition service. Your site gets left clean and ready for the next stage — not piled with rubble waiting on a separate skip bin booking.
Can you also pour the replacement slab after demolition?
Absolutely. If you’re removing an old slab to pour a new one, we can handle both ends of the job. Talk to us about your replacement slab requirements when you get in touch and we’ll price the full scope together.
Get a Free Slab Demolition Quote in Hervey Bay
If you’ve got a slab that needs to come out — whether it’s an old shed base in Pialba, a house slab from a knockdown in Urangan, a backyard entertainment area making way for a pool in Eli Waters, or a commercial floor slab across Fraser Coast’s industrial precincts — we’re the crew to call.
We service Hervey Bay and the broader Fraser Coast region including Urangan, Pialba, Torquay, Eli Waters, Kawungan, Craignish, Point Vernon, and surrounding areas. No job is too straightforward and none is too complex — if there’s a slab on your site that needs to go, we know how to get it out cleanly.
Getting started is simple. Get in touch for a free slab demolition assessment and quote. We’ll come out, look at the slab, identify any services considerations, and give you a clear, honest price for the full job — breaking, loading, removal, steel extraction, and site cleanup included. No hidden costs, no surprises on the day.
And if you’re ready to talk about the replacement slab at the same time, we can price both ends of the job together and make the whole process as straightforward as possible.
Ready to get the old slab out and move your project forward?
Contact our Hervey Bay team today for your free slab demolition assessment and quote. We’ll get back to you promptly and have someone on site to assess your job as soon as possible.
👉 Looking to replace your slab after demolition? Check out our Concrete Slabs Hervey Bay and Shed Slabs Hervey Bay service pages for everything you need to know about your new pour.

