
Mountain View Concrete Contractors serves homeowners and property managers throughout Mountain View with concrete driveways, patios, retaining walls, and foundations - and we have been doing it long enough to know that clay soil and a 60-year-old slab require a different approach than fresh construction on flat ground. We reply within one business day and give you a written estimate before any work begins.

Mountain View has a large stock of homes from the 1950s and 1960s, many of which still have their original concrete driveways. After 50 to 70 years of Bay Area wet-dry cycles and clay soil movement, those surfaces often crack, settle unevenly, and develop drainage problems. Our concrete driveway building work starts with proper base preparation so the new surface holds up to Mountain View conditions for decades, not just a few years.
Mountain View's mild year-round climate makes outdoor living practical for most of the year, and a well-built concrete patio extends your usable living space without adding to your home's square footage. Ranch homes in particular often have small rear yards where a properly graded patio makes a real difference in how the space drains and functions.
Properties with sloped yards in Mountain View need retaining walls that can handle seasonal soil movement from clay expansion. A wall that is correctly reinforced and backfilled holds grade through wet winters and dry summers without leaning or cracking.
Slab foundations are common on Mountain View's postwar ranch homes and are well suited to the area's flat terrain. Whether you are adding an ADU, building a detached garage, or replacing a failed slab, Mountain View's soil conditions require proper grading, vapor barrier, and reinforcement to prevent the slab from shifting over time.
Older garage slabs in Mountain View frequently show oil staining, surface scaling, or uneven panels from decades of use. A resurfaced or fully replaced garage floor improves safety, supports heavier loads, and prepares the space for finished uses like a workshop or home gym.
City sidewalks in Mountain View's older neighborhoods buckle from tree root pressure and soil movement. Sections that have heaved or sunk create tripping hazards - a liability issue for homeowners - and the city can issue notices requiring repairs on the portion of sidewalk adjacent to your property.
Mountain View sits on clay-heavy soils throughout the Santa Clara Valley. Clay swells when it absorbs winter rain and shrinks back in the dry summer heat. That back-and-forth puts constant stress on every concrete surface that sits on the ground - driveways, patios, walkways, and slabs. This is not a one-time event; it happens every year. Concrete work that does not account for this movement will start showing cracks within a few seasons, regardless of how good the surface looks on the day it is poured.
Mountain View's housing stock also skews older. The city has a large share of ranch-style homes built between the 1940s and 1970s, most of which have original concrete flatwork that has never been replaced. Many of these surfaces are now approaching or past the end of their useful life. High home values here - well above $1 million on average - make it worth doing concrete work properly, because poor workmanship that fails in a few years costs more in the long run than a job done right the first time.
Our crew works throughout Mountain View regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Mountain View Building Division for driveway, patio, and structural concrete work. We understand which neighborhoods sit on softer alluvial soils versus more stable ground, and we adjust base depths and reinforcement accordingly before the first pour. Skipping permits in Mountain View is a problem at resale - all work we do is inspected and documented.
From the older ranch blocks near Castro Street to the apartment corridors along El Camino Real, the properties we work on in Mountain View vary from modest single-story homes on 6,000-square-foot lots to multi-family buildings with shared flatwork that serves dozens of residents. Shoreline at Mountain View and the neighborhoods close to the Googleplex bring their own mix of property types, many of which have concrete surfaces that have gone untouched since the original build. We have worked in all of these areas.
We also serve neighboring communities and can help you compare options with context from nearby projects. Los Altos, CA is a common extension of our Mountain View service area, and we regularly work across the border in Sunnyvale as well.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will respond within one business day. We do not give firm prices over the phone without seeing the site - but we will ask enough questions to give you a realistic range before we visit.
We come to your property, measure the area, assess the soil and access conditions, and review finish options. The written estimate you receive covers materials, labor, permit fees, and timeline - no hidden line items added later.
For permitted work in Mountain View - which includes most driveways and structural concrete - we handle the permit application before scheduling your start date. Permit approval typically takes one to two weeks depending on city workload.
We handle demolition, base prep, pour, finish, and cleanup. You will get a clear handoff timeline for when surfaces are walkable and vehicle-ready, along with care instructions for the curing period.
We serve Mountain View homeowners and property managers with concrete driveways, patios, retaining walls, and foundations. No pressure, no obligation - just a clear written estimate after we see your project.
(650) 582-0099Mountain View is a city of about 82,000 people in the heart of Silicon Valley, bordered by Sunnyvale to the south, Los Altos to the west, and Palo Alto to the north. The city is best known as the home of the Googleplex, Google's main campus, and as a center of Bay Area tech employment. Castro Street runs through the heart of downtown, lined with restaurants and a weekly farmers market that draws residents from across the city. Shoreline at Mountain View, a large public park and amphitheater on the bay, is another landmark that most residents know well.
The city's housing stock is dominated by single-story ranch homes built during the postwar boom of the 1950s and 1960s, mostly on lots of 5,000 to 7,000 square feet. Neighborhoods close to downtown tend to have older homes on smaller lots with attached garages, while areas near Shoreline and toward the city's edges have a mix of postwar subdivisions and newer multi-family development along El Camino Real. Mountain View is also home to a significant number of rental properties - roughly half of all housing units are renter-occupied - which means property managers as well as homeowners regularly need concrete work done on a schedule. Neighboring Los Altos and Palo Alto share many of the same housing characteristics and soil conditions.
Transform your outdoor space with a professionally poured concrete patio.
Learn MoreAdd texture and pattern to concrete surfaces for lasting curb appeal.
Learn MoreSafe, level sidewalks poured and finished to local code standards.
Learn MoreSmooth, strong garage floors built for daily vehicle and foot traffic.
Learn MoreStructurally sound retaining walls that hold soil and add definition.
Learn MoreInterior and exterior concrete floors installed flat and on spec.
Learn MoreSolid concrete steps built for safety, stability, and clean appearance.
Learn MoreProperly graded and reinforced slab foundations for any structure.
Learn MoreFull foundation installs engineered for long-term structural integrity.
Learn MoreCommercial-grade parking lots poured for heavy traffic and longevity.
Learn MoreWe serve Mountain View and the surrounding cities. Reach out now and we will get back to you within one business day with a written estimate - no obligation.