
Supreme Huntington Beach Concrete Company is a licensed concrete contractor serving Long Beach with retaining walls, driveways, patios, and foundation work. We work regularly in this city - from the older bungalows in Belmont Shore to the ranch homes in east Long Beach - and we know how coastal conditions and aging housing stock shape the work.

Long Beach has many older properties with grade changes and drainage challenges - particularly in neighborhoods near the Los Angeles River and low-lying streets that flooded during past heavy rain seasons. A properly built retaining wall holds soil in place and redirects water away from foundations. Learn more about our concrete retaining walls service.
A large share of Long Beach homes were built before 1960, which means many original concrete driveways are now 60 to 80 years old and showing visible cracks, heaving, and surface breakdown. We replace aging flatwork with properly reinforced slabs built to current city standards, ready to handle decades more of daily use.
Long Beach homeowners use their outdoor space year-round, and a patio that drains poorly or has heaved sections becomes a safety hazard as much as an eyesore. We pour patios with the correct slope away from the home and a sealer that holds up to the salt air that comes with living this close to San Pedro Bay.
Mature street trees are common throughout Long Beach neighborhoods like Bixby Knolls and California Heights, and their roots push up sidewalk panels over time. We remove the damaged sections, address root problems where needed, and pour new panels that meet Long Beach city requirements for residential frontage.
ADU construction is popular in Long Beach given the city's density and demand for rental units. Every new ADU needs a properly engineered concrete slab that accounts for local soil conditions and Long Beach building requirements. We handle foundation work for additions and accessory structures across the city.
Pools are common on Long Beach single-family properties, especially in the east side neighborhoods like El Dorado Park and Los Altos. Pool deck concrete takes constant chlorine exposure on top of the general coastal moisture - we use slip-resistant finishes and reinforced slabs built for that kind of daily wear.
A large share of Long Beach homes were built between the 1920s and 1950s - which means a lot of original concrete is now past its useful life. Craftsman bungalows in Bixby Knolls and California Heights, Spanish Colonial Revival homes throughout the Wrigley district, and the beach cottages in Belmont Shore all have concrete flatwork that was poured to the standards of its era. Those standards did not include the steel reinforcement and subgrade prep that modern concrete work requires, and the result shows up as cracking, heaving, and uneven surfaces that collect standing water after the winter rain season hits.
Salt air off San Pedro Bay adds another layer of wear that inland homeowners do not deal with. The marine layer that rolls in off the Pacific most mornings keeps exterior surfaces damp for hours, and the combination of daily moisture cycles and salt exposure breaks down unsealed concrete faster than most homeowners expect. Long Beach also has neighborhoods near the Los Angeles River and other low-lying streets that collect runoff during heavy rain events - proper grading, drainage, and retaining wall work are not optional in those areas, they are what keeps water away from foundations and out of yards.
Our crew works throughout Long Beach regularly and pulls permits from the City of Long Beach Development Services department. We know what their inspectors look for on retaining wall and flatwork submissions, which keeps your project on schedule instead of delayed over a paperwork issue.
Long Beach is one of the larger cities we work in, and we understand that a job in Naples near the canals is a different situation than a job in east Long Beach out near the El Dorado Park area. Coastal properties deal with tighter lot access, more salt air exposure, and older utility infrastructure than the ranch homes built in the 1960s on the east side. We have worked on both and we know how to plan for each. The city sits on major corridors including the 710 and 405 freeways, which our crews navigate regularly to get to jobs throughout the area.
We also serve neighboring Torrance to the west, and we work regularly in Huntington Beach further south along the coast.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and describe your project. We respond within 1 business day and arrange a time to come see the property - we do not give numbers without an on-site look first.
We measure the area, check drainage and soil conditions, and give you a written estimate that itemizes every cost. This is also where we identify any permit requirements specific to your address in Long Beach - so there are no surprises after work starts.
We pull the required city permit, demolish the existing surface if needed, prepare the subgrade, and set the forms. The pour typically takes one day, and you do not need to be home during most of the work - just have the area clear.
After seven days of curing, we apply a sealer suited for coastal conditions and walk through the finished work with you. We do not close out the job until the work meets the standard, and we leave you with a clear maintenance schedule.
We serve all of Long Beach, CA - from the older bungalows in Belmont Shore and Bixby Knolls to the ranch homes out in El Dorado Park. Call us or fill out the form and we will get back to you within 1 business day.
(657) 485-0088Long Beach is one of the largest cities in California, with roughly 466,000 residents packed into about 50 square miles along San Pedro Bay. The housing stock is unusually diverse for a Southern California city - Spanish Colonial Revival homes and Craftsman bungalows from the 1920s and 1930s sit in established neighborhoods like Bixby Knolls and California Heights, while Belmont Shore and the Naples canal community have small beach cottages and mid-century homes on tight lots. East Long Beach neighborhoods like El Dorado Park and Los Altos have more typical postwar ranch homes built in the 1960s and 1970s. That mix of housing ages and types means concrete needs vary widely from one neighborhood to the next. More information about the city is available through the Long Beach Wikipedia article.
The city is home to landmarks most Southern California residents know well - the Queen Mary sits in the harbor, the Port of Long Beach handles hundreds of billions in annual trade, and the Second Street corridor in Belmont Shore is a neighborhood anchor for the west side. Long Beach borders the South Bay to the north, which is where we also work in Torrance, and our service area extends north into the Orange County corridor where we also cover Anaheim.
Get a durable, professionally poured concrete driveway built to last.
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Learn MoreSafe, code-compliant concrete sidewalks built for pedestrian traffic.
Learn MoreTough garage floor concrete that handles heavy vehicles and daily wear.
Learn MoreCustom decorative concrete finishes that elevate your property's curb appeal.
Learn MoreSolid retaining walls that control erosion and add structure to your yard.
Learn MorePrecision concrete floor installs for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreSturdy concrete steps built for lasting access and clean curb appeal.
Learn MoreCommercial-grade parking lots poured for high-traffic durability.
Learn MoreClean, accurate concrete cutting for repairs, openings, and modifications.
Learn MoreWe serve all of Long Beach, CA and the surrounding South Bay communities. Call us or send a message - we respond within 1 business day and all estimates are free.