
Cracked, sunken, or missing concrete around your driveway or walkways makes your property look neglected. We install curbing and sidewalks built to handle Rialto heat and clay soil movement.

Concrete curbing and sidewalk installation in Rialto means forming, pouring, and finishing fresh concrete along driveways, garden beds, or walkways - most residential jobs are completed in one to two days of active work, with foot traffic allowed after 24 to 48 hours of curing.
In Rialto, clay-heavy soils and summer temperatures that regularly exceed 100°F are the two biggest factors that determine how long a slab holds up. Concrete that was poured without a proper compacted base, or without enough control joints to guide cracking, tends to fail faster here than in cooler parts of California. If you are already dealing with crumbling or uneven panels, pairing a new sidewalk with drainage solutions can prevent water from pooling underneath and speeding up the next failure.
Whether you need curbing around a garden bed, a new driveway apron, or replacement panels along the street, this is work that pays off in both safety and curb appeal.
If cracks run across or along your sidewalk, or the surface is flaking apart, the concrete has reached the end of its life in that spot. In Rialto, clay soil movement and intense summer heat speed this process - a hairline crack can open significantly within a season or two.
When one panel rises higher than the next, it creates a lip that is easy to trip over. This is usually caused by soil swelling underneath - a common problem in clay-heavy Inland Empire soils. Beyond being a safety concern, an uneven sidewalk also creates liability exposure for the homeowner.
If the concrete edging that separates your driveway from the lawn or your garden beds from the walkway has broken away or sunk, mulch migrates, gravel scatters, and the front yard looks unfinished. Replacing it restores the clean, defined look that keeps your landscaping in order.
When a sidewalk or curbing has settled or shifted, it can redirect water toward your home rather than away from it. Even in Rialto's dry climate, an intense winter rain event can push water toward a foundation if the grade is wrong. Replacing or re-sloping the concrete fixes the drainage problem at the source.
We handle concrete curbing and sidewalk projects from small decorative edging jobs to full sidewalk replacement runs along a street frontage. Every project starts with base preparation - grading, compacting, and adding gravel fill where needed - because skipping that step is the main reason concrete fails prematurely in Rialto's clay soil. We also coordinate city permits when the work falls within the right-of-way, so you are not left figuring that out yourself.
For properties that need more than just concrete work, we often combine sidewalk installation with asphalt milling when a driveway resurfacing is happening at the same time. We also handle drainage solutions to make sure water flows away from the new concrete rather than pooling against it.
Best for homeowners who want clean, defined edges around garden beds, driveways, or landscaping without a full sidewalk project.
Ideal for properties where the transition between the driveway and the street has cracked, settled, or shifted out of grade.
Suited for homes with one or more cracked or uneven panels that create a trip hazard or fail a city inspection.
For properties adding a new walking path, replacing an entire run of deteriorated concrete, or building out a front-yard layout from scratch.
Rialto sits in the Inland Empire where summer temperatures climb well above 100°F and the sun beats down nearly year-round. Extreme heat accelerates how quickly fresh concrete sets, which makes finishing harder and raises the risk of surface cracking if the pour is not managed carefully. Contractors who know this area schedule pours for early morning, use the right mix, and take steps to slow the set and protect the surface while it cures. Homes in Bloomington and Colton face the same soil and heat conditions, and we handle concrete work across all of these communities.
A significant portion of Rialto's residential neighborhoods, especially newer developments, are governed by homeowners associations that have rules about the appearance and placement of curbing and sidewalks. Sidewalk work along the street also typically requires a city permit, since that strip of land falls within the public right-of-way. We handle both - checking HOA requirements and pulling the necessary permits so the job is done correctly and documented.
Call or submit a form to describe your sidewalk or curbing project. We reply within one business day and schedule a site visit to measure, assess the soil and existing concrete, and give you a written estimate at no cost.
We walk the area, check the base condition, and note any right-of-way or HOA considerations. If a city permit is required, we handle the application so you are not waiting on paperwork.
The crew removes old concrete, grades and compacts the base, and sets forms before the pour. In Rialto's summer heat, we schedule pours for early morning to get the best working window before conditions tighten.
After the pour, the surface cures undisturbed. If a permit was pulled, a city inspector confirms the work meets local standards. We do a final walkthrough with you to confirm edges, finish, and drainage slope before we leave.
We visit your property, measure the job, and give you a clear written quote. No pressure, no guesswork.
(909) 546-5231Rialto's summer heat is the biggest single risk to a fresh concrete pour. We schedule early-morning starts, use the right mix for extreme temperatures, and apply curing compounds to protect the surface. That discipline is why our concrete does not surface-crack within the first year the way a rushed hot-weather pour can.
We grade, compact, and add gravel fill before any form is set. In Rialto's clay-heavy soil, skipping this step is the primary reason concrete fails prematurely - we do not shortcut it. Proper base prep gives your slab the stable foundation it needs to resist ground movement year after year.
Sidewalk work along a public street requires city approval, and we handle the application for you. Permitted work is inspected and documented, which matters when you sell or refinance. We are familiar with Rialto's process and keep you informed on timing so there are no surprises. You can verify our license status at the{" "}California Contractors State License Board.
We work across Rialto and the surrounding communities and can often schedule a site visit the same week you call. Knowing the local neighborhoods means we can give you accurate estimates without padding for unknowns, and we understand the HOA and permit landscape throughout the Inland Empire.
Every concrete project we do is backed by proper licensing, hot-weather expertise, and real base preparation. That combination is what separates concrete that holds up for decades from slabs that start cracking within a few years in Rialto's climate.
Grind down worn pavement to a fresh, bondable surface before resurfacing - the right first step when a driveway or lot needs more than just a patch.
Learn MoreChannel water away from new concrete and your foundation so Rialto's occasional heavy rains do not undermine what was just installed.
Learn MoreSpring and fall fill up fast - call now to get on the schedule before the next heat wave makes scheduling tight.