
Colton Concrete Company is a licensed concrete contractor serving Victorville, CA, with concrete floor installation, driveway replacement, patio construction, and flatwork repair. Victorville sits at 2,700 feet in the Mojave Desert, where summers push past 100 degrees and winter nights drop below freezing - conditions that wear on concrete differently than anywhere else in San Bernardino County. Most Victorville homes were built in the 1990s and early 2000s, and that housing stock is hitting the age where driveways, garage floors, and patios need real attention. We hold a valid California C-8 Concrete Contractor license and respond to all new requests within 1 business day.

Most Victorville homes built in the 1990s and 2000s have two-car garages with slabs that are now 20 to 30 years old. The freeze-thaw cycle at High Desert elevation and years of oil and chemical exposure make these floors prone to surface cracking and spalling. A new concrete floor pour - with proper base prep and a curing protocol designed for Victorville temperatures - gives you a surface that holds up to the next 30 years of desert conditions. See our concrete floor installation service for details on the pour process, finishing options, and what base preparation involves.
Victorville driveways take a beating from the combination of desert heat, winter freeze-thaw cycles, and the wind-driven sand that grinds away at surface sealers over time. Many tract-built driveways from the 1990s and 2000s used minimum-spec mix designs that were not engineered for this elevation. A replacement driveway with the correct mix, proper thickness, and sealed control joints changes what the surface looks like after the next ten winters.
Victorville homeowners use their outdoor space year-round for much of the year, and the city's typical single-family lots have enough backyard area for a functional concrete patio. Desert landscaping with gravel and decomposed granite is common throughout the city, and a concrete patio area within that layout gives you a durable, low-maintenance surface that does not require watering or ongoing upkeep.
Victorville sidewalks in established neighborhoods go through the same freeze-thaw stress as driveways and patios - water gets into surface cracks in fall, freezes overnight in winter, and widens those cracks each season. Heaved or broken sidewalk panels near the public right-of-way can create liability for the adjacent property owner. We replace damaged sections and pour to City of Victorville right-of-way specifications.
Victorville garages see temperature swings from below freezing in winter to 100-plus degrees in summer - a range that is harder on a slab than the more moderate climate in the lower Inland Empire. Many garage floors in the city show surface spalling or cracking from years of these cycles. A new garage floor with the correct concrete mix for High Desert conditions and a sealed finish holds up through that temperature range year after year.
Front entry steps on Victorville homes from the 1990s and 2000s are reaching the age where freeze-thaw damage, surface cracking, and soil settling become visible problems. Cracked or shifting steps are a safety hazard and a code concern. We rebuild or replace them in concrete designed for High Desert temperature cycling, so the finished steps stay level and stable through the next 20 winters.
Victorville is not the same climate as the rest of San Bernardino County, and concrete contractors who primarily work in the lower Inland Empire do not always account for that. At 2,700 feet in the Mojave Desert, the city gets real winter freezes - nighttime lows drop below 32 degrees regularly from November through February, and the city occasionally sees snow. That creates a genuine freeze-thaw cycle where water gets into surface cracks, expands overnight, and widens the damage each season. A driveway or patio that was barely cracked in October can look significantly worse by spring. The summer side of the equation is equally extreme - temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees from June through September, and the UV intensity at high elevation breaks down surface sealers faster than in the lower desert.
The housing stock in Victorville reflects the city's rapid growth during the 1990s and early 2000s. Most homes are detached single-family tract houses built by regional production builders using minimum-spec concrete mix designs. Those slabs are now 20 to 30 years old - right at the age where the combination of temperature cycling, surface wear, and deferred maintenance starts to compound. Homes near Bear Valley Road and the newer subdivisions on the west side of the city are slightly younger, while the older areas near the historic Route 66 corridor have more varied construction. Desert wind carries grit and sand that grinds at exterior surfaces every year, and homes that have not had exterior concrete work touched in a decade are typically showing it.
We work on residential concrete projects throughout Victorville, including the tract neighborhoods east and west of the I-15, the areas near Southern California Logistics Airport (the former George Air Force Base) on the southern edge of the city, and properties along the historic Route 66 corridor downtown. The permit office for residential concrete work in Victorville is the City of Victorville Building and Safety Division, and project timelines here account for permit review before work can start on projects that require one.
Victorville homes have a lot in common with each other from a construction standpoint - most were built by the same handful of regional tract builders using similar materials and methods. That consistency means we know the most common problems before we arrive: undersized garage slabs, driveways that were poured without enough base gravel, and patios with inadequate drainage slope. The desert landscaping that is standard throughout the city - gravel yards, decomposed granite, low-water plants - creates a specific context for flatwork that a contractor familiar with the area accounts for differently than one accustomed to turf-heavy Southern California lots.
Our primary base is in Colton, about 45 miles south of Victorville via the I-15 - and we regularly work the full corridor between the two cities. We also serve San Bernardino, which sits between Colton and Victorville on the I-15 and has its own housing stock and climate profile that is distinct from both ends of the corridor.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form. We reply within 1 business day and schedule a free site visit. You do not need to know your square footage or have specs ready - that is what the visit is for.
We visit your Victorville property, assess the existing slab or ground conditions, and check drainage. You receive a written estimate that breaks out labor, materials, and permit fees before you make any decision. We also discuss the timing of the pour relative to the season - summer heat in Victorville affects scheduling.
For projects requiring a City of Victorville permit, we handle the application and monitor review status. Once the permit is cleared, we set a start date and confirm what you need to clear from the area before we arrive.
The crew completes the work and cleans the site before leaving. We walk you through the finished project, explain curing timelines specific to Victorville's temperatures, and tell you what to watch for in the first winter freeze-thaw season after a new pour.
We serve Victorville and the High Desert corridor. We account for the freeze-thaw cycle and desert UV conditions that most Inland Empire contractors do not think about - and we give you a written quote before any work begins.
(909) 679-6575Victorville is one of the larger cities in San Bernardino County, with a population of around 134,000 people. It sits in the Mojave Desert at approximately 2,700 feet above sea level along the Mojave River, about 90 miles northeast of Los Angeles via Interstate 15. The city grew rapidly during the 1990s and 2000s as buyers priced out of the Los Angeles and Inland Empire markets discovered that Victorville offered significantly more house for the same budget. Historic Route 66 runs through the city along D Street and 7th Street, and the California Route 66 Museum is located downtown. Southern California Logistics Airport, converted from the former George Air Force Base, is one of the largest employers in the area on the southern edge of the city. The Mojave River, which flows mostly underground through the region, runs through Victorville and is one of the most recognizable natural features in the area.
The vast majority of Victorville's housing stock is detached single-family homes, most of them built by regional tract builders during the growth years of the 1990s and early 2000s. These homes are on medium-sized lots and typically have attached two-car garages, concrete driveways, and desert landscaping with gravel and low-water plants. The newer subdivisions west of town along Bear Valley Road are slightly younger than the neighborhoods closer to the I-15 interchange, and properties near the Route 66 corridor have a more varied, older character. To the south along the I-15 corridor sits San Bernardino, and further south is Colton, where we are based - both cities we serve regularly as part of the I-15 corridor.
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Learn moreThe freeze-thaw cycle and desert UV at Victorville's elevation require concrete work that accounts for local conditions - not a one-size approach from the lower Inland Empire. Call us today or request a free estimate online and we will assess your project and give you a written quote before work begins.