
Hesperia Concrete is a licensed concrete contractor serving Adelanto, CA with slab foundation building, driveway construction, patio work, and concrete flatwork. We have served the High Desert since 2024, pull all City of Adelanto permits on every job, and deliver written quotes before any work starts.
Virtually every home in Adelanto sits on a concrete slab foundation, and the city's flat, sandy lots require thorough soil compaction before any pour to prevent settling and cracking. Whether you are building a new structure or adding to an existing one, a correctly built slab is where everything starts. Read more about the process and what to expect on our slab foundation building page.
Adelanto's 1980s and 1990s tract homes are hitting the age where their original driveways are cracking and settling from decades of desert heat and winter freeze-thaw cycles. A replacement pour with proper base compaction and control joints is a meaningful upgrade over patching concrete that has already failed structurally.
With flat rectangular lots and no practical reason to maintain grass in the High Desert, a concrete patio is one of the most sensible outdoor improvements for Adelanto homeowners. It eliminates watering costs and gives you a surface that holds up through the summer heat without constant upkeep.
Adelanto homes from the 1980s and 1990s often have original front entry steps that have cracked or shifted from decades of freeze-thaw stress. Cracked or uneven steps are a safety issue and a code concern during a home sale or rental inspection. We replace them with properly reinforced concrete built to current standards.
Adelanto has continued to see new residential and light commercial development along the Highway 395 corridor, and new construction here needs a correctly built foundation that accounts for the sandy soil and seismic requirements that apply to all San Bernardino County construction.
Some of Adelanto's older residential streets have sidewalks that were poured quickly during the 1990s growth boom and have not held up well in the High Desert climate. We replace or extend sidewalk sections to current city grade requirements, including permit handling.
Most of Adelanto's housing was built quickly during the late 1980s and 1990s as the city grew from a small community into a full city almost overnight. Those homes are now 30 to 40 years old, and the driveways, patios, and slabs that came with them are showing the strain of decades in the High Desert climate. Adelanto sits at about 2,800 feet in the Mojave Desert, and the combination of summer temperatures regularly above 100 degrees Fahrenheit and winter nights that drop below freezing creates real freeze-thaw stress on concrete year after year. Water enters surface cracks during warm afternoons, freezes at night, and gradually widens those cracks. Concrete poured in this climate needs control joints and sealing to survive it.
The flat, sandy lots that are typical in Adelanto add another problem. Sandy desert soil does not drain quickly when the area gets a hard rain, and the occasional flash flooding the Mojave Desert sees can push moisture under slabs fast. If the soil beneath the concrete was not properly compacted before the pour, that moisture movement can shift the slab. That is the primary reason driveways and patios from the 1990s building boom crack early - the ground prep was rushed. The City of Adelanto requires permits for concrete flatwork, and the inspection that comes with that permit is an independent check that the base work was done correctly before the concrete covered it up.
We pull permits through the City of Adelanto and work regularly on the 1980s and 1990s single-family tract homes that make up most of the city's residential stock. We understand that these homes were built fast and that many of them need more than a patch - they need a properly prepared replacement pour that accounts for what the original installation skipped.
Adelanto is a city that many people pass through on the I-15 or along Highway 395 without stopping, but the residential neighborhoods here are distinct from the commercial corridors along those routes. The neighborhoods near Victorville Boulevard and those closer to El Mirage Road to the west have different characters and different property types. El Mirage Dry Lake - the flat lakebed just west of the city - is a landmark that locals use to describe the western side of town, and we are familiar with the area.
Adelanto sits right next to Victorville, and we also serve homeowners in Barstow to the north. All three communities share the same High Desert climate and soil conditions, so our approach to base prep, mix design, and scheduling around the desert heat is consistent across the area.
Call or submit a request online and we reply within one business day. We do not quote concrete jobs over the phone without seeing the site - the condition of Adelanto's sandy soil and the state of existing concrete can only be assessed in person.
We come to your property, assess the soil condition, measure the work area, and check whether any demolition or grading is needed before we can pour. You receive a written quote that covers concrete thickness, base preparation, control joint placement, and any permit fees - nothing left out.
Once you approve the quote, we file the permit application with the City of Adelanto. Permit approval typically takes one to three weeks. We schedule the work date around the permit and the season - summer jobs are planned for early morning pours to manage the desert heat.
The crew removes old concrete if needed, compacts the soil base, sets forms, and pours. New concrete needs 24 to 48 hours before foot traffic and about a week before vehicle use. For slab foundation work, we pause for the city inspection before covering the steel reinforcement with concrete.
We cover Adelanto and the surrounding High Desert. Written quotes, permits handled, no obligation to move forward.
(760) 456-4930Adelanto is a city of about 38,000 residents in the Victor Valley area of San Bernardino County, sitting at roughly 2,800 feet in the Mojave Desert. The city incorporated in 1988 and grew quickly through the late 1980s and 1990s, with subdivisions going up across flat desert land in a short period. That fast growth left the city with a housing stock that is mostly single-story and two-story tract homes from that era - properties that are now 30 to 40 years old and due for the kind of updates and repairs that come with that age. Adelanto borders Victorville to the east and sits just off the I-15 freeway, making it part of the broader Victor Valley community even though it has its own distinct neighborhoods. The Adelanto, California Wikipedia article gives a full picture of the city's history and geography.
Adelanto is known locally as part of the High Desert, a name residents use to describe the Victor Valley region as a whole - including neighboring Victorville and Apple Valley. The city has grown into one of the Inland Empire's industrial areas, with warehouses and distribution centers concentrated along Highway 395. Most residential neighborhoods are to the north and west of that corridor, on flat streets with modest lot sizes. El Mirage Dry Lake, just west of the city, is a well-known local landmark used for off-road events and is a reference point residents use when describing the western edge of town.
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Contact us today and we will schedule an on-site estimate. You will have a written quote before we do any work.