Asphalt
New Asphalt Driveway Installation in Eugene, Oregon
Cojo
May 30, 2026
7 min read
A new asphalt driveway in Eugene turns out well when the foundation is built for the local soil and the work is timed to the weather — and it becomes a repeating headache when those basics get skipped. Lane County's southern Willamette Valley clay, the City of Eugene's right-of-way approach standards, and a paving window limited by heavy winter rainfall all shape how a new driveway should be installed here.
This guide walks through what a new Eugene driveway installation involves, from the first cut of excavation to the cure, so you can ask better questions and recognize quality work. For the detailed mechanics, see our step-by-step installation process, and for the big picture, the complete Oregon asphalt driveway guide.
The crew marks the driveway's dimensions and excavates to the depth needed for base and asphalt, commonly several inches below finished grade. Topsoil, organic material, and soft spots are removed, because a driveway built on topsoil will settle. In Eugene's clay-heavy soils, this step sometimes goes deeper to clear unstable ground.
With the native soil exposed, the crew evaluates and proof-rolls it. Spots that rut or pump water reveal weak soil to dig out and replace with rock. Catching these now is cheap; finding them after paving is a tear-out. On wet valley lots, careful sub-grade work is where a good contractor earns the job.
Crushed aggregate base is spread in lifts and compacted layer by layer. The base — not the asphalt — carries the load, so depth and compaction here decide how long the driveway lasts. Eugene's saturated valley soils generally call for a deeper, well-compacted base than firm, dry ground would.
The base is graded to shed water, typically with at least a couple percent of fall. In rainy Eugene, drainage is not a detail — water that sits under or beside asphalt is the leading cause of early failure. Good grading here protects the whole investment.
Hot-mix asphalt is delivered, laid, and compacted with a roller while still hot. Residential driveways are commonly paved at 2 to 3 inches of compacted asphalt; heavier-use driveways go thicker and are sometimes placed in two lifts. The rolling must finish before the mix cools.
Fresh asphalt needs time to cure and harden before heavy use and before sealcoating. Paving in Eugene's warm, dry summer gives the surface a full season to set up before the wet winter returns.
The base deserves emphasis, because it is where Eugene installations succeed or fail. The valley's clay and silt soils hold water for months, and saturated soil loses bearing strength. A driveway built on a thin or poorly compacted base over wet clay will crack, sink, and pothole within a few years no matter how good the surface looks.
A quality Eugene install handles this with adequate base depth, compaction in lifts, geotextile fabric where the soil is soft, and drainage that moves water away. When you compare bids, the base spec is where they differ most — ask every contractor how deep the base is, what aggregate, how many lifts, and whether fabric is included for your soil.
The part of your driveway that connects to the public street — the approach — falls under the City of Eugene's right-of-way standards and typically requires a permit. The approach has construction requirements distinct from the private driveway surface, including dimensions and how it ties into the curb and any sidewalk.
A contractor experienced in Eugene handles this: pulling the approach permit, building to City spec, and coordinating any inspection. Skipping or self-managing the approach permit is a common way projects hit snags, which is one more reason local experience matters when choosing who installs your driveway.
Eugene's reliable paving window runs roughly late spring through early fall, when the valley ground has dried and temperatures stay warm enough for proper compaction and curing. The southern valley's heavy winter rainfall makes off-season paving especially risky for a surface that never sets up correctly. Because the window is narrow and summer fills up, booking ahead is wise — scheduling in late winter or spring for a summer install secures better availability and lets the contractor choose a good weather stretch.
Installation cost depends on size, base needs for your soil, slope, drainage, and the approach work — Eugene's valley conditions often push real costs above generic averages. For local pricing, see our asphalt driveway cost in Eugene guide. If your existing driveway is worn but the base may be sound, our driveway resurfacing in Eugene guide covers the lower-cost overlay option.
A well-installed driveway lasts decades with simple maintenance, so the investment is in getting the base, drainage, and approach right the first time. We are glad to evaluate your site and provide a free, itemized quote for a new Eugene driveway.
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