
Supreme Huntington Beach Concrete Company is a licensed concrete contractor serving Fullerton with slab foundations, driveways, patios, and retaining walls. Fullerton has one of northern Orange County's oldest housing stocks, and we understand the concrete challenges that come with 70-to-100-year-old homes - from settled foundations to driveways that have been cracking for decades. We respond to estimate requests within one business day.

Fullerton homeowners adding a room, garage, or ADU need a foundation that accounts for the city's older soil conditions and current building code requirements. Our slab foundation building work is engineered to the load, properly reinforced, and sized to pass Fullerton inspections without a re-do.
Many Fullerton driveways were poured in the 1950s and 1960s and have been patched and re-patched for years. A proper replacement starts with full demolition, correct subgrade preparation, and a new reinforced pour - not another layer over old concrete that will keep moving.
Fullerton's older Craftsman bungalows and ranch homes often have small, aging backyard slabs that were never properly sloped away from the house. Pooling water near the foundation is one of the most common issues we see. A correctly poured replacement slab solves the drainage problem and adds usable outdoor space.
Properties in north Fullerton and along the hills at the city's edge have grade changes that require retaining walls to hold soil and manage runoff. We build walls sized for the actual soil load and with proper drainage behind them to prevent pressure buildup that causes premature failure.
Pre-1960 homes in Fullerton sometimes have foundations that were never designed for current seismic standards or have been compromised by decades of soil movement. We install new foundations for additions and replacement work, following current Fullerton building codes for residential structures.
Downtown Fullerton neighborhoods are full of mature trees that have lifted and cracked original sidewalk panels. We replace damaged sections in compliance with City of Fullerton requirements, handling both the private walkway and the public right-of-way portion correctly.
Fullerton has one of the oldest housing stocks in northern Orange County. Neighborhoods near downtown were developed heavily in the 1920s through the 1950s, with Craftsman bungalows, Spanish Colonial Revival homes, and early ranch-style houses on lots where the original concrete work - driveways, sidewalks, patios, and foundations - has been in place for 70 to 100 years. At that age, surface patching is not a solution. Soil has shifted, concrete has cycled through thousands of wet and dry seasons, and the original pour often lacked the reinforcement standards that are required today. Replacing aging concrete correctly on an older Fullerton home requires understanding the history of how these properties were built.
Seasonal conditions make the situation more demanding. Fullerton gets more than 280 sunny days per year, and the UV exposure combined with winter rains - most of the annual rainfall arrives between November and March - creates a cycle of drying, cracking, and water intrusion that is hard on poorly maintained concrete. Santa Ana winds in fall accelerate surface drying on fresh or unsupported concrete. Homes with drainage issues near the foundation, which are common on lots where the original grading has settled over decades, need concrete work that solves the water problem at the same time as replacing worn surfaces.
Our crew works throughout Fullerton regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. We know the City of Fullerton Engineering Services permit and inspection process for driveways, flatwork, and foundations, and we handle the application on your behalf so the project moves forward without delays on your end.
Fullerton is a fully built-out city of about 22 square miles, and the character changes noticeably from one neighborhood to the next. The streets near Downtown Fullerton and the historic district are lined with Craftsman bungalows and Spanish Revival homes, many with original concrete that has been in place since the 1930s and 1940s. Further east and south, the housing shifts to postwar ranch homes on wider lots. Near Cal State Fullerton, the density increases with apartment buildings and older multi-unit properties. Each part of the city brings different access conditions, slab depths, and permit requirements.
We also serve neighboring Pomona to the northeast, where the housing stock has a similar mix of older and postwar residential properties. Homeowners in the Fullerton-Brea corridor and along the Fullerton-Anaheim border can reach our team for both cities.
Call (657) 485-0088 or fill out the contact form. We follow up within one business day to confirm your Fullerton address and schedule an estimate visit at a time that works for you.
We visit your property, measure the work area, and assess the existing concrete and soil conditions. You get a written, itemized quote - no vague totals - so you know exactly what you are paying for before any work is authorized.
For permitted jobs, we file with the City of Fullerton and track approval. Once cleared, we schedule demolition and subgrade prep - usually one to two days - followed by the pour day, coordinated around your schedule.
Fresh concrete needs seven days before normal vehicle use and 28 days for full strength. We walk through the finished work with you, confirm you are satisfied, and close any open permits with the city inspection.
From the historic streets near Downtown Fullerton to the ranch homes on the east side, we serve all of Fullerton. Written quotes, permits handled, one business day response.
(657) 485-0088Fullerton is a mid-size city of roughly 140,000 residents in northern Orange County, covering about 22 square miles that are fully built out. The city is known for its preserved downtown historic district, anchored by Harbor Boulevard and Commonwealth Avenue with 1920s and 1930s brick commercial buildings, music venues, and restaurants. The residential neighborhoods near downtown include some of the oldest housing in Orange County - Craftsman bungalows, Spanish Colonial Revival homes, and early ranch-style houses that date to the 1920s through 1950s. The Fullerton Heritage historic district program recognizes and works to preserve many of these older neighborhoods.
Moving east from downtown, Fullerton transitions into postwar ranch-home neighborhoods built in the 1950s and 1960s on wider lots with attached garages and concrete driveways. Cal State Fullerton sits near the center of the city and is home to over 40,000 students, creating a dense rental corridor along Harbor Boulevard and Nutwood Avenue. About 46 percent of Fullerton households are owner-occupied, giving the city a strong base of homeowners who invest in their properties. Neighboring Anaheim borders Fullerton to the south and east and shares much of the same postwar residential character. We serve both cities from the same crew.
Get a durable, professionally poured concrete driveway built to last.
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Learn MoreClean, accurate concrete cutting for repairs, openings, and modifications.
Learn MoreWe work on homes all across Fullerton - from the Craftsman bungalows near downtown to the ranch houses on the east side. Call now or submit a request and we will follow up within one business day.