Who We Are

Hi! We're Concrete Beverly Hills, and honestly, we're just regular folks who happen to be really good at concrete work. We live right here in the neighborhood—probably passed you at Whole Foods or waved at you while walking the dog.

Look, here's the deal: we show up when we say we will (crazy concept, right?), we do the job the way we'd want it done at our own house, and we don't leave until you're genuinely happy with what we've built. Need a patio where you can finally host those family barbecues you keep talking about? Or maybe your foundation is giving you those 3am worry sessions? We've got you covered.

Our Story

Twenty years ago, my buddy and I were sitting in his garage, probably drinking too much coffee, when we decided to start this thing. Our big revolutionary idea? Just do good work for good people. Earth-shattering, I know.

Since then, we've been all over Beverly Hills—your driveways, your foundations, those gorgeous patios that make your neighbors a little jealous. We've fixed foundation problems that were keeping families up at night and built outdoor spaces where kids take their first steps and grandparents celebrate birthdays.

You know what we've figured out after all these years? Yeah, we've learned when to stamp concrete so it looks like real stone (timing is everything), and we know exactly how to handle it when that random rainstorm shows up. But the real lesson? This isn't about concrete. It's about people trusting us with their homes.

I mean, think about it—your house is where your life happens. It's where your kids grow up, where you argue about whose turn it is to take out the trash, where you collapse after long days. When we're working on your foundation or building your new patio, we're not just mixing cement. We're working on the place where your family makes memories. That's pretty heavy stuff, and we don't forget it.

We've seen it happen over and over. That new patio becomes where your teenager finally opens up during weekend morning coffee. The smooth driveway means no more scraping the car bumper (you know what I'm talking about). The solid foundation means you can sleep without wondering if that crack is getting bigger. This stuff matters.

What Makes Us Different

Okay, here's the thing—lots of people can pour concrete. My neighbor's cousin's brother-in-law probably did concrete work once. But there's doing concrete, and then there's doing it right.

We're not those guys who roll up, bang out the job in half the time it should take, and disappear before you realize what happened. Nope. We actually take our time because shortcuts always come back to bite you later.

When you call us, we're going to listen. Really listen. Not that thing where we nod and think about our next job. We'll come over, probably end up chatting about your kids or complaining about traffic, and figure out exactly what you need. Sometimes people think they want one thing, but after we talk it through, we realize something completely different would work better. We'll tell you that, even if it means less money for us.

Here's another thing—we live here too. We deal with the same weather, the same soil, the same everything. When I'm picking materials for your project, I'm thinking, "Would I want this at my house?" Because guess what? Your neighbors are our neighbors. If we mess up your driveway, everyone's going to know about it pretty quick.

From the first time you call (and probably get my voicemail because I'm elbow-deep in concrete somewhere) to the day we're packing up our tools, we want you to feel like you made the right choice. Your house is your castle, and we're just honored you're letting us work on it.

Professional Standards You Can Trust

Look, having a construction crew at your house is weird, right? Strangers tramping around your space, making noise, probably using your bathroom (sorry, but it happens). We totally get that it's a big deal.

That's why we do everything by the book—licenses, insurance, all that official stuff. Not because lawyers make us, but because it's the right thing to do. We keep our work area as clean as possible, though I'll be honest, concrete work is messy. We'll do our best to keep the chaos contained.

But here's what really matters: we're going to talk to you. A lot. Maybe more than you want, actually. If it looks like rain and we need to wait, I'll call you. If we find something weird underground (happens more than you'd think), we'll stop everything and figure it out together. No "surprise, this is going to cost more" conversations at the end.

Our guys show up ready to work, they know how to work around family life (kids, dogs, that delivery truck that always comes at the worst time), and they treat your place like their mom lives there. Because honestly, some of their moms probably do live in the neighborhood.

Our Promise to You

We're not trying to win any fancy industry awards or get featured in some magazine. We just want to finish your project and have you think, "Man, I'm really glad I called these guys."

We promise to shoot straight with you—no fancy sales pitches or pressure tactics. We'll treat your house the way we'd want someone to treat ours (which, let's be real, is probably better than we treat our own most days). And when we're done, we stand behind our work completely.

When you hire us, you're not getting some big corporate contractor who'll disappear the minute something goes wrong. You're getting neighbors who have to see you at the grocery store. Our reputation lives and dies with every job we do, which means making you happy isn't just good business—it's survival.

We've been part of this community for twenty years, and hopefully we'll be here for twenty more. Every driveway we pour, every foundation we fix, every patio we build is a little piece of our legacy in this neighborhood.

Let's build something together that makes you smile every time you pull into your driveway.

Exterior view of a modern staircase with concrete steps and a stone pillar, leading up to a landscaped garden with plants and rocks, enclosed by a metal railing.
Worker in a yellow safety jacket and helmet using a concrete power trowel on a large floor surface.
A backyard patio with a round glass table, four chairs, and a red umbrella. There are potted plants, flowers, a small garden, and a yellow Adirondack chair. The area is enclosed by a wooden fence, with a garage and a house visible in the background.
Two workers smoothing wet concrete with trowel tools.