
Concord Concrete Company is a concrete contractor in Concord, NH serving the city with driveways, patios, foundations, and retaining walls since 2025 - locally based on Capitol St with same-week scheduling available for most projects.
We know Concord's freeze-thaw cycles, we pull permits through the city, and we show up when we say we will.

Concord driveways take a beating from more than 100 freeze-thaw cycles every year. concrete driveway building in Concord gives you a surface built for the freeze-thaw cycle - properly thick, properly jointed, and finished to handle New Hampshire winters.
Concord homeowners use their patios hard from May through October, and many of the older slabs in the city are past their useful life. A properly poured replacement handles the climate and gives you a level outdoor surface for years.
New Hampshire's frost line sits around 48 to 60 inches deep, which is why every foundation in Concord requires significant excavation. We dig to the required depth, form and pour to code, and handle the city permit and inspections.
Concord's outer neighborhoods and hillside lots often deal with sloping yards and erosion. Concrete retaining walls hold grade on uneven terrain and are a long-term fix compared to timber or block alternatives.
Steps on Concord homes - especially older South End and downtown properties - frequently shift or crack from frost movement. New concrete steps, poured with proper footings, restore safe entry and hold through hard winters.
Stamped concrete gives Concord homeowners a decorative surface at a lower cost than natural stone, and it handles the freeze-thaw cycle better than pavers when installed correctly. Popular for driveways, patios, and pool surrounds.
Concord averages around 64 inches of snow per year, and the ground regularly freezes to four feet or more below the surface through winter. That combination drives more than 100 freeze-thaw cycles each year - each one putting stress on any concrete surface that holds moisture. Driveways crack. Patios heave. Steps pull away from the house. These are not signs of poor luck; they are the predictable result of New Hampshire's climate working on concrete that was not built for it. A contractor who works here regularly knows how to specify mixes, thicknesses, and joint patterns that extend the life of a surface by years.
Concord also has one of the older housing stocks in New Hampshire, with a large share of homes built before 1960. Many of those properties have original driveways, foundations, and exterior concrete that are decades past their intended lifespan. Replacing aging concrete on an older home is not the same as pouring fresh for new construction - the crew has to work around existing structures, assess what is underneath, and match grades that may have shifted over time. The city's permit and inspection process adds another layer: Concord's Building Department requires permits for most structural concrete work, and inspectors check key stages before and after the pour. Contractors who know the process keep projects on schedule. Those who do not create delays.
Our crew works throughout Concord regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Concord's Building Department for concrete projects across the city. We are familiar with the range of property types here - from older colonial and Cape Cod homes on tight South End lots to newer ranch-style houses on larger lots on the west and north sides. Each type comes with its own set of concrete needs, and after working in Concord we understand which neighborhoods tend to have clay-heavy soil, where ledge rock is a likely surprise during excavation, and what the spring snowmelt season does to properties that drain toward their foundations.
Concord sits along the Merrimack River in south-central New Hampshire, and the city is anchored by the New Hampshire State House - the oldest state capitol building still housing its legislature in original chambers. From the Victorian and Federal-style homes near the State House to the neighborhoods out toward Penacook and East Concord, the city's residential streets hold a wide mix of housing ages and styles. We serve all of them. For homeowners in Franklin and other communities north of Concord, we cover those areas as well - the soil and frost conditions are similar, and many of our Concord customers have referred neighbors there.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form with a brief description of what you need. We ask a few basic questions and get back to you within one business day. No obligation, no pressure.
We come to your property in Concord to measure, look at the ground conditions, and understand any access or drainage factors. After the visit you get a written estimate - not a ballpark over the phone - so you know exactly what is included.
For projects that require a City of Concord permit, we handle the application and coordinate the review timeline with your schedule. We also call 811 before any digging to have utilities marked, which is required by law in New Hampshire.
The crew does the work, passes the required inspection if one is needed, and cleans up the site before leaving. We walk the finished project with you and give you clear guidance on curing time, sealing, and winter care.
We serve all of Concord, NH - from the South End to the north side. No-pressure estimates, permits handled, one business day response.
(603) 802-8228Concord is New Hampshire's state capital and home to roughly 44,000 residents, making it a mid-sized city by New England standards. The city has several distinct neighborhoods: the South End and downtown, with Victorian and Federal-style homes dating back to the mid-1800s; East Concord and Penacook, with more modest working-class housing; and newer subdivisions on the west and north sides built largely from the 1980s through the 2000s. According to U.S. Census data, roughly 55% of housing units are owner-occupied, and a large share of the city's housing stock was built before 1960. That older building stock is a defining feature of the city's concrete service needs.
Concord sits in the Merrimack River valley, which gives the city a relatively flat center surrounded by hills. Eagle Square is the recognized heart of downtown, surrounded by shops and historic brick buildings. Concord Hospital is one of the largest employers in the region. Residents tend to be long-term homeowners - the combination of state government jobs, healthcare employment, and a stable housing market creates a community that invests in its properties. We serve homeowners across all of Concord's neighborhoods, and also work regularly in nearby Franklin to the north.
Get a durable, long-lasting concrete driveway built to withstand New Hampshire winters.
Learn MoreTransform your backyard with a custom concrete patio built for outdoor living.
Learn MoreAdd beauty and texture to any surface with professionally stamped concrete.
Learn MoreSafe, smooth concrete sidewalks installed to local code and built to last.
Learn MoreUpgrade your garage with a strong, smooth concrete floor that resists stains.
Learn MoreEnhance any space with decorative concrete finishes tailored to your style.
Learn MoreSolid concrete retaining walls that control erosion and define your landscape.
Learn MoreProfessional concrete floor installation for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreBeautiful, slip-resistant concrete pool decks built for safety and curb appeal.
Learn MoreCustom concrete steps crafted for safety, durability, and great first impressions.
Learn MoreStrong slab foundations poured precisely to support your home or building.
Learn MoreExpert foundation installation that gives your structure a reliable base.
Learn MoreDurable commercial parking lots poured to handle heavy traffic year-round.
Learn MorePrecisely formed concrete footings that anchor structures firmly in the ground.
Learn MoreRestore and raise your foundation to correct settling and structural issues.
Learn MorePrecise concrete cutting services for repairs, modifications, and new installations.
Learn MoreConcord's construction season is short - reach out now and we will get your project on the schedule before the summer rush fills up.