San Jacinto Concrete Company provides concrete contractor services in Beaumont, CA, including slab foundation building, driveway construction, patio slabs, and concrete retaining walls. We have served the Beaumont area since 2024 and work throughout the city - from Sundance and Tournament Hills to Fairway Canyon and the newer streets on the east side of town.

Beaumont has grown rapidly, and ADUs, garage conversions, and new accessory structures are being added to lots throughout the city. At 2,500 feet elevation with winter nights that drop below freezing, a slab foundation here needs a proper moisture barrier and a compacted base that accounts for the temperature swings - not just a quick pour. See our slab foundation building services.
Most Beaumont homes were built between 2000 and 2015, which means original driveways are reaching the age where freeze-thaw cracking and UV degradation from the intense high-elevation sun start to add up. A replacement driveway poured with the correct thickness and joint spacing handles the San Gorgonio Pass climate far better than surface-level patching.
Several Beaumont neighborhoods in the northern and eastern parts of the city were built on graded hillside terrain where retaining walls and drainage systems were part of the original construction. Over time, settling and erosion can undermine those walls - especially after a season with heavier-than-normal rainfall.
Beaumont winters are mild enough that outdoor space gets used year-round, but the occasional hard frost means a patio slab here needs to be finished and sealed in a way that prevents moisture from entering and cracking the surface when temperatures drop overnight in December or January.
Fence and wall footings in Beaumont have to handle both wind load from the San Gorgonio Pass gusts and the freeze-thaw stress that comes with winter nights at 2,500 feet. Footings poured too shallow or without adequate concrete depth will work loose over time - often after the first hard frost season.
Entry walks and pathways throughout Beaumont HOA communities are subject to association standards for appearance and materials. Cracked or settled walkway sections that create a trip hazard often need full panel replacement rather than surface patching to meet the appearance requirements of communities like Sundance and Tournament Hills.
Beaumont sits at around 2,500 feet in the San Gorgonio Pass - a natural gap in the mountains that funnels wind from the coast to the desert. That wind is constant and strong, and it affects concrete work in ways that do not come up in the flatlands. A pour made in the wrong conditions dries unevenly on a windy afternoon, leading to surface cracks within the first week. The same elevation that produces strong winds also brings winter nights cold enough to freeze, which means Beaumont gets the freeze-thaw cracking cycle that lower-elevation Inland Empire cities largely avoid. Water that gets into a small crack freezes overnight, expands, and widens the crack - every cold night of the winter season. A concrete contractor who works only in Perris or Temecula may not account for this.
The housing stock itself is nearly uniform - most homes were built between 2000 and 2015 by production builders during Beaumont's rapid growth period. Master-planned communities like Sundance, Tournament Hills, and Fairway Canyon were put up quickly in batches, using similar materials and construction methods throughout. That consistency is useful for a contractor: it means the homes here are predictable. Original driveways and slabs from those developments are now 15 to 25 years old and are entering the repair-or-replace decision point. The intense UV exposure at 2,500 feet accelerates surface degradation beyond what the same slab would experience at lower elevation - paint fades faster, caulk shrinks faster, and unsealed concrete surfaces break down faster than most homeowners expect.
Our crew pulls permits from the City of Beaumont Building Division and is familiar with the inspection requirements for residential concrete work in this city. Interstate 10 runs through Beaumont and connects it to Banning to the east and the wider Inland Empire to the west - Oak Valley Parkway and Cougar Way are the main interior corridors that reach the residential subdivisions on both sides of the freeway.
Most Beaumont residents are commuters who are away from home during the day, and we are used to working on properties without the homeowner present. Every site gets a walk-through at the start and a finished walk-through at completion. We also serve Banning just to the east, where older housing stock and the same San Gorgonio Pass conditions create similar concrete maintenance needs, and Hemet to the south, where a mix of housing ages and clay soils make driveway and flatwork replacement a regular job type.
Call us or fill out the contact form and we will respond within one business day. We will ask the basics - what you need, the rough size, and whether the property is in an HOA community - so we come to the site visit prepared for the right questions.
We visit your Beaumont property and look at the site - existing slab condition, drainage, access for equipment, and any HOA material or color requirements. The written estimate covers all costs so there are no surprises on the final invoice.
We pull the city permit where required, handle any existing slab removal, prep the base, and schedule the pour to avoid peak wind times and afternoon heat that affect curing in Beaumont conditions. You do not need to be home during the work.
After the concrete cures, we schedule the city inspection where required and walk through the finished work with you. The surface is ready for foot traffic in about 24 hours and for vehicles after seven full days.
We serve all of Beaumont, CA - Sundance, Tournament Hills, Fairway Canyon, and the newer neighborhoods on the east side of town. No cost, no pressure.
(951) 474-1097Beaumont is a city of roughly 60,000 residents in western Riverside County, sitting at about 2,500 feet at the western end of the San Gorgonio Pass. Interstate 10 runs through the city and connects it to Banning to the east and Beaumont to the west - the rows of wind turbines visible on the hills along this corridor are one of the most recognizable local landmarks, marking one of the windiest spots in Southern California. The city grew from around 11,000 residents in 2000 to over 60,000 by the early 2020s, with nearly all of that growth coming from large master-planned communities built on the western and southern edges of the city. Sundance, Tournament Hills, Fairway Canyon, and Noble Creek are the largest and best-known of these communities.
The housing stock is overwhelmingly single-family, owner-occupied, and built with stucco exteriors and concrete tile roofs - the standard of Inland Empire tract construction. Most homes sit on lots between 5,000 and 8,000 square feet with attached garages, small to medium yards, and concrete driveways and walkways that are now entering their first major service window. Noble Creek Regional Park is a large public gathering space that most Beaumont residents know well. Neighboring Banning to the east shares the same pass conditions, and we serve homeowners across both cities.
Safe, ADA-compliant sidewalks installed for homes and businesses.
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Learn moreSolid, code-compliant steps crafted for safety and curb appeal.
Learn moreEngineered slab foundations poured to support structures of all sizes.
Learn moreComplete foundation installation services for new builds and additions.
Learn moreClean, accurate concrete cutting for repairs, modifications, and installations.
Learn moreFrom Sundance to Tournament Hills, we know what Beaumont properties need and how the San Gorgonio Pass conditions affect concrete work. Call today or request a free estimate online.