Concrete Pool Decks
Slip-resistant pool deck surfaces poured to handle Jurupa Valley's sun and heat season after season.
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Old slab cracking, settling, or just worn out? We install concrete floors in Jurupa Valley that start with proper ground prep and hold up through clay soil movement and Inland Empire summers.

Concrete floor installation in Jurupa Valley means preparing the ground, pouring a reinforced slab leveled while wet, and finishing the surface before it sets - most residential jobs take one to two days to pour, with 24 to 48 hours before foot traffic and a full week before vehicles or heavy loads.
The surface is only part of the story. In Jurupa Valley, the clay-heavy soil underneath needs to be properly compacted and sometimes topped with a gravel layer before any concrete is poured. Skip that step, and even a well-poured slab can crack or settle as the ground moves through wet and dry seasons.
Homeowners converting a garage into living space or adding a room often need this service alongside others. Our garage floor concrete service covers the specific requirements for vehicle-rated slabs, if that is the use case you are planning for.
If cracks in your garage or utility floor keep getting wider or longer, or if one side of a crack sits noticeably higher than the other, the slab is telling you something is wrong underneath. In Jurupa Valley, this is often caused by clay-heavy soil shifting through wet and dry cycles. Patching over it without addressing the cause will not hold for long.
A floor that drains poorly or holds standing water has settled unevenly. This is especially common in older Jurupa Valley homes where the original slab has shifted over decades. Standing water near a garage door or in a utility room can damage belongings, encourage mold, and eventually work its way under the slab.
If the top layer of your concrete floor is peeling away in chips or feels gritty underfoot, the surface has deteriorated past the point where patching makes sense. This kind of breakdown often happens when concrete was poured during hot weather without proper curing - something that is easy to get wrong in Jurupa Valley's climate.
If certain spots on your floor sound hollow when you tap them, or feel slightly springy as you walk, the slab has separated from the soil beneath it and a void has formed. This is a structural concern, not a surface issue, and it tends to worsen over time. It is especially common in homes built before proper compaction standards were routine.
We handle the full scope - removing an old slab, compacting the subgrade, adding a gravel base where the soil requires it, and pouring a reinforced four-inch slab with control joints cut before the concrete sets. That last step matters: control joints give the concrete a place to flex instead of cracking randomly across the middle of your floor. Every pour is leveled and finished to drain correctly. Many clients who call for a new floor also ask about our concrete pool decks service when they are upgrading multiple outdoor surfaces at once.
Finish options include broom finish for traction, smooth trowel for a cleaner look, and exposed aggregate for outdoor and covered utility areas. Sealers can be applied after curing to protect against stains and moisture. For spaces being converted from garage to living area, we assess what the existing slab requires before recommending replacement versus repair - a step that saves homeowners from paying for a full tearout when targeted work would do the job. The American Society of Concrete Contractors publishes installation standards we follow on every project.
Best for spaces that have never had a concrete floor or where the existing slab is too far gone to save - starts from the ground up.
Suited to homeowners whose current garage slab is cracked, sunken, or was poured too thin to handle vehicle weight reliably.
For homeowners finishing a garage, adding a room, or converting a utility space - meets current building standards for the new use.
A good fit for covered patios, workshops, or any area where appearance matters alongside durability - broom, trowel, or exposed aggregate.
A significant share of Jurupa Valley's housing stock was built between the 1960s and the 1990s, which means many homes have original concrete floors that are now 30 to 60 years old. Slabs of that age often show settling, cracking, or surface deterioration - and some were poured thinner than what current standards recommend. When replacing an older slab, there is a real chance the subgrade underneath needs more preparation work than a fresh installation on undisturbed ground would require. We assess that honestly before giving you a quote.
We work throughout Jurupa Valley and the broader Inland Empire, including Fontana and Riverside. The seismic activity in this region - with several active fault systems nearby - is another reason proper subgrade preparation and control joint placement matter more here than in less active parts of the country. According to the Portland Cement Association, slab-on-grade construction in clay-soil regions requires specific steps to prevent the heave and cracking that otherwise follow wet and dry seasons.
We respond within 1 business day. Most contractors cannot give an accurate floor quote by phone alone - we schedule an on-site visit to assess the area, the soil, and what the existing slab looks like before giving you a price.
We check the subgrade, look at the existing slab if there is one, and confirm whether a permit is needed for your project. Your written estimate covers labor, materials, debris removal, and permit fees - no line items added afterward.
If an old slab is being removed, the crew handles breaking and hauling. Then the ground is compacted and a gravel base is added where the soil requires it. This step sets up everything that comes after.
In summer, we start early to avoid the peak heat. The slab is poured, leveled, and finished in a single day for most residential floors. Control joints are cut before the concrete sets. Curing begins immediately and runs 24 to 48 hours before foot traffic.
Free on-site visit and written quote. No obligation. We respond within 1 business day.
(951) 393-1148Jurupa Valley's clay soils are one of the leading reasons concrete floors fail here. We assess the ground conditions before any concrete is ordered - and we tell you honestly what the subgrade needs, whether that is basic compaction or a full gravel base. That assessment happens upfront, not after demolition has started.
Pouring concrete when Jurupa Valley temperatures are above 95 degrees requires early-morning scheduling and active moisture management during curing. We build these precautions into every summer project - they are not extras. A floor poured without them in this climate is more likely to develop surface cracks within the first year.
Concrete floor work that involves a new slab typically requires a permit from the City of Jurupa Valley. We apply for it, track it, and coordinate the inspection - you do not have to navigate that process. The permit creates a record that the work met current building standards, which matters when you sell your home or deal with an insurance claim.
Any contractor doing concrete work in California must hold a current license from the California Contractors State License Board. Our license is active and verifiable on their public database - it also confirms we carry required insurance coverage. Hiring an unlicensed contractor leaves you with no recourse if the work fails.
Every floor project gets a written quote that covers demolition, subgrade prep, the pour, and permit fees. Nothing is added to the bill after the crew arrives.
Slip-resistant pool deck surfaces poured to handle Jurupa Valley's sun and heat season after season.
Learn more →Garage-specific slab work with reinforcement and finishing choices that suit daily vehicle use.
Learn more →Jurupa Valley summers fill our schedule fast - contact us now for a free estimate and lock in a pour date before the heat window closes.