
Palm Springs Concrete serves Beaumont homeowners with concrete floor installation, driveways, patios, and foundations built for the San Gorgonio Pass - where strong winds, freeze-thaw winters, and a decade of rapid tract construction create specific demands. We handle HOA documentation, city permits, and written estimates, with replies within one business day.

Beaumont homeowners converting garages, adding utility rooms, or upgrading original builder-grade slabs often need a concrete floor that is flat, smooth, and sealed for long-term durability. Tract construction in Beaumont sometimes left floors with surface defects or insufficient thickness for conversion use. We pour replacement slabs or overlay systems to a finished spec suited for the intended use - workshop, living space, or storage. See the full scope of this work on the concrete floor installation page.
Many Beaumont homes built between 2000 and 2010 are now reaching the age where the original builder driveway is showing visible cracking, surface spalling, or settlement. At 2,500 feet, freeze-thaw stress on thin or unreinforced slabs accelerates that failure. We replace driveways with properly reinforced concrete, correct sub-base issues that caused the original to fail, and match finish and expansion joint placement to Beaumont permit requirements.
Beaumont has genuine outdoor living seasons - spring and fall in the pass are comfortable and windless enough to enjoy a backyard. Many newer Beaumont homes were delivered with minimal or no backyard hardscape, leaving homeowners with a bare yard that is difficult to maintain in dry conditions. A concrete patio or hardscape slab creates usable outdoor space that holds up to the freeze-thaw winters and does not require irrigation or replanting after wind events.
A number of Beaumont subdivisions were built on graded hillside terrain in the northern and eastern parts of the city. Retaining walls on these lots hold back soil on sloped yards, prevent erosion after rain, and create level outdoor space. Over time, settlement and drainage pressure can crack or bow original retaining structures. We build new walls and replace failing ones, with drainage provisions built in to prevent hydrostatic pressure buildup behind the wall.
Beaumont homeowners adding ADUs, room additions, or covered patio structures need new concrete slabs built to current Riverside County and City of Beaumont code. Beaumont is in a seismic zone, and foundation slabs for habitable additions must meet specific reinforcement and depth requirements. We design and pour to those specifications and coordinate the required inspections with the City of Beaumont Community Development Department.
In Beaumont neighborhoods where the original builder sidewalks were poured across graded fill, settlement over 15 to 20 years has created uneven panels with trip hazards and drainage problems. Frost movement in winter can lift panels on the north-facing sides of streets that stay shaded and cold. We replace individual panels or runs, correct grade to drain away from the home, and match the finish and width to existing city sidewalk standards.
Beaumont is one of the fastest-growing cities in California, and the bulk of its housing stock was built between 2000 and 2015. That rapid growth came with the typical characteristics of that construction era: large subdivisions built quickly on graded terrain, builder-grade concrete flatwork that met minimum code requirements, and stucco-and-tile construction that looks fine when new but needs real attention around the 15 to 20 year mark. At 2,500 feet in the San Gorgonio Pass, Beaumont sees genuine winter frost, strong sustained winds, and high-elevation UV exposure that all shorten the life of under-built concrete. A contractor who treats Beaumont like a flat desert valley job - thinner slabs, no frost-depth footings, no wind-adjusted curing - is setting up that work to fail ahead of schedule.
The hillside terrain in parts of Beaumont creates an additional layer of complexity. Many of the subdivisions in the northern and eastern parts of the city were carved out of sloped land, and the graded lots beneath those homes have been settling for 15 to 20 years. Driveways and slabs that appeared level at move-in now show the effects of that settling - gaps, cracks with vertical displacement, and drainage that has shifted away from the original design. Correcting these problems requires assessing the sub-base condition, not just the surface. Simply pouring new concrete over a settled or poorly compacted base repeats the same failure on a shorter timeline.
Our crew works throughout Beaumont regularly and is familiar with the permit process through the City of Beaumont Community Development Department. Beaumont has grown quickly, and navigating permits in a city with a heavy current construction volume sometimes means longer review timelines than smaller municipalities. We build that timeline into project scheduling so your project is not delayed by an unexpected permit backlog.
The city is organized around several large master-planned communities that most Beaumont residents know by name: Sundance on the south side of Interstate 10, Tournament Hills, and Fairway Canyon to the east. These neighborhoods have HOA-managed common areas and homeowner approval requirements for exterior work. We are familiar with the documentation and material requirements these HOAs typically request and can help you get the necessary approvals alongside the city permit.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Banning just a few miles to the west. Both cities are in the same wind and freeze zone, and we schedule across the pass corridor together - so proximity to the Banning border does not add wait time or reduce availability.
Call the number above or submit the estimate form below. We reply within one business day. We ask a few brief questions up front - scope, site access, existing surface condition - so the site visit covers what matters and does not waste your time.
We visit the property, assess the existing slab or sub-base condition, and review drainage and grade. For projects in HOA-managed communities, we confirm what documentation the HOA requires alongside the city permit. You receive a written estimate before any work is scheduled - no verbal quotes that shift once the job starts.
We file city permits and handle HOA documentation on your behalf. Pour dates are scheduled around the 10-day forecast - we do not pour when a freeze is expected within 24 hours. Summer jobs are scheduled for early-morning starts. You do not need to be present for the pour if that is not convenient.
After curing, we walk the finished work with you, answer any questions, and explain the cure schedule - 24 to 48 hours for foot traffic, seven days for vehicles. We apply sealer as standard and document any items to watch during the first winter freeze season.
We serve Beaumont and the San Gorgonio Pass corridor, handle city permits and HOA documentation, and give you a written estimate before any work starts. No pressure, no hidden costs.
(442) 212-1787Beaumont has grown from a small pass-through city of about 11,000 in 2000 to a community of over 60,000 today, making it one of the fastest-growing cities in California over that period. The city sits at about 2,500 feet at the western end of the San Gorgonio Pass in Riverside County, about 20 miles east of Riverside and about 75 miles east of Los Angeles via Interstate 10. That growth was driven by affordability - families priced out of closer-in Inland Empire cities found single-family homes here for significantly less. The result is a city where most of the housing stock is between 10 and 25 years old, owner-occupied, and built by national tract builders on terrain that was graded and subdivided quickly.
The best-known neighborhoods in Beaumont include Sundance, Tournament Hills, and Fairway Canyon - large master-planned communities with parks, trails, and HOA-managed common areas. Noble Creek Regional Park serves as a central green space for families across the city. Beaumont borders Banning to the west, and the two cities together form the population center of the San Gorgonio Pass. Beaumont residents commonly commute west toward Riverside, Redlands, or beyond - which means the majority of homeowners here are relying on contractors to work reliably during the day without constant supervision.
Get a durable, professionally poured concrete driveway that lasts for decades.
Learn MoreTransform your outdoor space with a custom concrete patio built to last.
Learn MoreAdd texture and color to concrete surfaces with decorative stamped patterns.
Learn MoreSafe, level concrete sidewalks installed to code for any property type.
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Learn MoreElevate any surface with custom decorative concrete finishes and designs.
Learn MoreEngineered concrete retaining walls that control erosion and grade changes.
Learn MoreProfessional concrete floor installation for residential and commercial spaces.
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Learn MoreSolid slab foundations poured right for new construction and additions.
Learn MoreExpert foundation installation services to support any structure confidently.
Learn MoreDurable commercial concrete parking lots designed for high-traffic performance.
Learn MoreProperly sized and poured concrete footings for stable structural support.
Learn MoreRaise and level settled foundations to restore structural integrity safely.
Learn MoreProperly built for the San Gorgonio Pass - freeze-thaw rated mixes, HOA-ready documentation, and written estimates for every Beaumont project. Call now or use the form below.