
Redlands Concrete Company serves Victorville homeowners with concrete floor installation, garage slabs, driveways, and patio construction. We understand the conditions that make concrete work in Victorville different from the rest of Southern California - the high desert freeze-thaw cycle, summer temperatures above 100 degrees, and wind-driven sand that scours surfaces faster than in lower-elevation communities. We reply to every inquiry within one business day.
Redlands Concrete Company serves Victorville homeowners with concrete floor installation, garage slabs, driveways, and patio construction. We understand the conditions that make concrete work in Victorville different from the rest of Southern California - the high desert freeze-thaw cycle, summer temperatures above 100 degrees, and wind-driven sand that scours surfaces faster than in lower-elevation communities. We reply to every inquiry within one business day.

Most Victorville homes were built between 1990 and 2010, and those slabs are now hitting the age where freeze-thaw damage, UV degradation, and desert wind abrasion have done visible work. A properly installed replacement slab - poured to correct thickness with adequate base preparation and reinforcement - handles the temperature swings at 2,700 feet in a way an aging original floor simply cannot. See how we install concrete floors.
Desert landscaping with gravel and decomposed granite is common in Victorville yards, and concrete driveways are the standard because they hold up where asphalt deteriorates quickly under the intense summer UV and hot-tire contact. Victorville's freeze-thaw cycle cracks driveways that were not poured with adequate thickness and joint spacing - we build driveways to handle both the summer heat and the winter cold nights that are part of high desert living.
Victorville's milder shoulder seasons - spring and fall - are among the most comfortable outdoor living conditions in Southern California, and a concrete patio extends your usable yard space through those months. Concrete holds up to the desert environment without the warping, splintering, or bleaching that wood surfaces experience under intense UV and heat exposure. It also does not shift the way decomposed granite does during Victorville's occasional flash flood runoff events.
The two-car attached garage is standard in Victorville's 1990s and 2000s tract home stock, and those original garage slabs are now 15 to 35 years old - old enough to show surface flaking, oil absorption, and cracking from thermal cycling. A sealed garage floor resists the oil stains and grit that desert living brings inside, and a properly poured replacement handles the temperature differential between a sun-baked exterior and a cooler interior far better than a deteriorating original slab.
Victorville's high desert wind carries sand and fine grit that scour concrete surfaces at a pace that surprises homeowners accustomed to coastal California. Sidewalk panels that have cracked from freeze-thaw damage or settled from the sandy, shifting desert soil beneath them are a code compliance issue and a tripping hazard. We replace damaged sections and pour new sidewalk runs to grade and ADA standards, using joint placement that accounts for Victorville's temperature extremes.
Victorville sits at roughly 2,700 feet in the Mojave Desert - higher than most of the Inland Empire cities to the south - and that elevation produces conditions that affect concrete in ways that do not apply to lower-altitude communities. Summer heat regularly tops 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and the high desert UV exposure at this elevation is more intense than at sea level. But what separates Victorville from purely desert climates is the winter: overnight temperatures drop below freezing from November through February, and the city occasionally sees snow. That back-and-forth between triple-digit summer days and freezing winter nights puts a stress cycle on concrete that coastal California homeowners never experience. Water gets into small cracks during warm days and freezes at night, widening those cracks with each cycle. A slab that looks fine in October can be visibly worse by March.
The bulk of Victorville's housing was built in the 1990s and 2000s, which means most homes are now 15 to 35 years old - right at the age where original flatwork, garage slabs, and driveways reach the end of their useful life all at roughly the same time. The desert soil in Victorville drains differently than the clay-heavy ground in Redlands or Ontario, and the sand and grit carried by high desert wind events scour surface finishes year after year. Concrete that has never been sealed in this environment ages noticeably faster than sealed surfaces, and a contractor who understands the specific conditions here - not just generic concrete practices - will account for those differences in how your project is prepared, timed, and finished.
We work with the City of Victorville Building and Safety Department for permits on concrete floor installations, structural slabs, and flatwork that requires city review. The permit process in Victorville runs through San Bernardino County procedures for some project types, and knowing which projects trigger county involvement versus city review alone is part of what our crew has learned from working in this area. We handle the paperwork on your behalf and will not schedule a pour until the permit is in hand.
Victorville is a city that most residents navigate by Interstate 15 and Bear Valley Road, which runs east to west and is the main artery connecting the older neighborhoods near the historic Route 66 corridor downtown to the newer subdivisions on the north and east sides. The Mojave River runs through the city and is a recognized landmark even though it flows mostly underground. Homes near lower-lying areas and the river corridor see more drainage variability than the elevated tract neighborhoods, and that drainage pattern affects how we approach ground preparation before a concrete pour.
We also serve Rancho Cucamonga and other Inland Empire communities to the south, and moving between those lower-elevation cities and Victorville's high desert setting has given our crew a clear sense of how the soil, climate, and permit processes differ. That context shapes how we prepare a site, choose concrete mix additives, and schedule a pour for a Victorville job versus one in the valley below.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form describing the space and what you need. We respond within one business day - no phone tag, no waiting for a callback that does not come.
We visit your Victorville property to measure the space and assess the existing floor or ground. You get a written estimate covering the full scope - demo, base prep, pour, and finish - so there are no surprises when the bill arrives. We do not quote concrete jobs over the phone.
For projects that require a City of Victorville building permit, we submit the application and handle all city communication. Work does not start until the permit is approved - typically a few business days to two weeks depending on the city's current workload and the type of project.
The crew handles demo, base preparation, reinforcement, and the pour in a scheduled session - the space needs to be clear before we arrive. After the slab cures, we walk through the finished work and coordinate any required city inspection. You will have a clear timeline for when the space is safe to walk on and then to use normally.
We serve homeowners throughout Victorville and the High Desert and reply within one business day. No commitment required to get a written estimate.
(909) 488-7493Victorville is one of the larger cities in San Bernardino County, with a population of around 134,000 people and a location at 2,700 feet in the Mojave Desert along the Mojave River. The city grew rapidly through the 1990s and 2000s as affordable home prices attracted buyers priced out of the Los Angeles and Inland Empire markets, which means most of Victorville's housing stock is now in the 15 to 35 year old range. Interstate 15 runs directly through the city, connecting it to Las Vegas to the northeast and making Victorville a commuter hub - many residents drive or take the Metrolink rail service to jobs in San Bernardino and Riverside.
The older part of the city runs along the historic Route 66 corridor near D Street and 7th Street, where the California Route 66 Museum is located and some of Victorville's earlier housing stock can be found. The newer neighborhoods spread north and east, with tract homes that share similar construction methods and materials across entire subdivisions. Victorville's desert landscaping is practical - most yards have traded grass for gravel, decomposed granite, and drought-tolerant plants - which means concrete driveways, patios, and utility slabs are the primary hardscape across the city. For service in neighboring communities to the south, we also cover Rancho Cucamonga and the broader Inland Empire valley.
Durable, professionally poured concrete driveways built to last in the Inland Empire climate.
Learn moreCustom concrete patios that extend your outdoor living space with long-lasting quality.
Learn moreDecorative stamped concrete that replicates the look of stone, brick, or tile at a fraction of the cost.
Learn moreSafe, level concrete sidewalks installed to city specifications for residential and commercial properties.
Learn moreSmooth, sealed concrete garage floors that resist stains, cracking, and heavy vehicle traffic.
Learn moreArtistic concrete finishes including staining, overlays, and texturing for stunning visual results.
Learn moreStructurally sound concrete retaining walls that control erosion and define your landscape.
Learn morePrecision concrete floor installations for residential, commercial, and industrial spaces.
Learn moreSlip-resistant, attractive concrete pool decks designed to complement any backyard.
Learn moreSafe, well-crafted concrete steps and staircases built to code for any property.
Learn moreSolid slab foundations poured with reinforced concrete to support structures of any size.
Learn moreExpert foundation installation services that give every structure a stable, lasting base.
Learn moreCommercial-grade concrete parking lots engineered for heavy use and minimal maintenance.
Learn moreProperly sized and reinforced concrete footings to support fences, decks, and structural loads.
Learn moreFoundation raising and leveling to correct settling and restore structural integrity.
Learn morePrecision concrete cutting for repairs, modifications, and utility access with minimal disruption.
Learn moreWe understand the high desert conditions that affect concrete in Victorville - call now or submit a request and we will respond within one business day.