Parking lots, ADA-compliant sidewalks, loading-dock aprons, and light commercial slabs — poured on a schedule that works around your operating hours and walked back to a finished, code-ready surface.
San Tan Valley Concrete Pros handles the full range of light commercial concrete work for retail centers, professional offices, industrial parks, and HOA common areas across 85143 and the surrounding East Valley.
Every commercial pour starts with the same questions: how does the work fit around your operating hours, what does the traffic plan look like, and how do we keep your customers, tenants, or employees moving while the slab cures. We bid it that way, sequence it that way, and pour it that way.
Scheduling around business hours is the part most contractors skip. Night pours, weekend pours, phased pours that keep half the lot open while the other half cures — that's the kind of sequencing a commercial property actually needs, and what we plan around in the bid.
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Six categories cover the work we see most often on East Valley commercial sites.
New construction and reconstruction. Includes subgrade, base, reinforcement, jointing, and ADA-compliant striping coordination after cure.
Code-compliant sidewalks, curb ramps, and detectable warning surfaces poured to current ADA standards for slope, cross-slope, and landing dimensions.
Heavy-duty aprons rated for truck and forklift traffic. Thicker slab, higher PSI mix, and joint layout that handles repeated axle loads.
Slabs-on-grade for warehouse expansions, mechanical pads, generator pads, dumpster enclosures, and trash-corral floors.
Saw-cut, demo, and re-pour of interior commercial slabs for tenant build-outs — plumbing trenches, equipment pads, refinish-grade floors.
Crack repair, spall patching, joint replacement, and section replacement for existing commercial lots and walkways.
We walk the site, measure the work, identify subgrade and drainage conditions, and put together a written bid with scope, mix design, and timeline. Most commercial bids come back within the week.
Before we mobilize, we sit down with you and map the work against your business hours. Night pours, weekend pours, phased pours — whatever keeps your customers and tenants moving while the slab cures.
Cones, signage, barricades, and pedestrian routing get planned in writing before day one. ADA-compliant detours when sidewalks are out. Property managers get a single point of contact for the duration of the job.
Subgrade prep, formwork, reinforcement, pour, finish. Standard broom finish for parking lots and walkways; trowel or specialty finish on request for interior slabs and feature areas.
Curing schedule and re-open dates given to you in writing. We come back to remove barricades, sweep the site, and walk the finished work with you before the job closes.
Recent commercial and heavy-residential pours from across San Tan Valley and the East Valley. Commercial photography library expanding — ask during the site walk for project-specific references.
Yes. We carry general liability and workers' comp coverage appropriate for commercial sites. Certificates of insurance are sent to your property management or general-contractor's office before mobilization, with the entity named as additional insured if required.
Yes — and it's the part we plan first. Most parking-lot and apron work runs as night pours or weekend pours. Phased pours keep half the lot or walkway open while the other half cures. The schedule gets agreed to in writing before we mobilize.
Yes. Sidewalks, curb ramps, parking-space access aisles, and detectable warning surfaces get poured to the slope, cross-slope, and dimension requirements in current ADA guidelines. We can coordinate with your architect or compliance consultant on field conditions.
For prevailing-wage or public-works projects, ask about scope during the bid. We can advise on whether the job falls under our typical commercial scope or needs to be referred out.
Workmanship warranty is included on every commercial pour. Specific terms — duration, what's covered, what isn't — are written into the contract before signature so there's no ambiguity later. Concrete is a natural material; hairline shrinkage cracks aren't a defect, and the warranty language reflects that.
Foot traffic: typically 24–48 hours. Light vehicle traffic: 5–7 days. Heavy or truck traffic: 7–10 days minimum, depending on slab thickness and mix design. Exact re-open dates are given to you in writing at pour and confirmed at cure.
Tell us about the property and the scope. We'll walk the site within the week and put a written bid in your hands.
ADA-compliant pedestrian routes, walkway repair, and new sidewalk installs.
View sidewalks & walkways → SpokeCrack repair, spall patching, joint replacement for commercial and residential surfaces.
View concrete repair → SpokeNew driveways, replacements, and heavy-residential pours with the same prep discipline.
View driveways →