Albany Concrete Company provides concrete contractor services in Springfield for driveways, patios, and foundations. We have served Lane County homeowners for years and reply to every request within one business day.

Springfield homes with pools need decks that handle wet feet, heavy sun exposure, and freeze-thaw cycles without cracking or becoming slippery. Concrete pool decks give you a safe, durable surface that stands up to moisture and temperature swings better than wood or composite materials.
Many Springfield homes were built from the 1950s through the 1970s and now have original concrete driveways that are cracked, settled, or stained beyond repair. We replace aging driveways with new concrete designed to handle the clay soil and 47 inches of rain this area gets every year.
Patios in Springfield need proper drainage and base preparation or they crack and settle within a few years. Homes on clay soil or near the Willamette River often have drainage problems that need to be addressed before the pour. We design and build patios that stay level and dry.
Most Springfield homes sit on crawl space foundations, and moisture intrusion is a common problem in this wet climate. We install new foundations with proper footings, drainage, and moisture barriers to prevent the settling and water damage that older foundations often show.
Sidewalks and walkways crack from freeze-thaw cycles and shift from clay soil expansion. Homes with mature trees also deal with root intrusion that pushes concrete out of alignment. We replace cracked walkways with control joints and proper base work to prevent the same problems from happening again.
Decorative concrete adds color, texture, and pattern to driveways, patios, and walkways without the maintenance of pavers or natural stone. For Springfield homes on tree-lined streets or near Dorris Ranch, decorative concrete gives you curb appeal while standing up to the rain and freeze-thaw stress.
Springfield sits in the southern Willamette Valley right next to Eugene, where the McKenzie River meets the Willamette. The city gets 47 inches of rain per year, and the heavy clay soil does not drain well. Water sits on the surface and saturates the ground for weeks after major storms, which creates problems for concrete driveways, patios, and foundations. Freeze-thaw cycles from November through March crack concrete that was not designed to handle the moisture and temperature swings, and homes near the rivers or on low-lying ground often sit in mapped flood zones where drainage is a constant concern.
Most of Springfield's housing stock was built from the 1950s through the 1970s, and many homes now have aging concrete flatwork that is cracked, settled, or stained beyond repair. Crawl space foundations are common in this region, and moisture intrusion under homes is a known issue that needs to be addressed when replacing or repairing concrete. A concrete contractor who knows Springfield designs the base, drainage, and control joints to handle the clay soil and wet winters, not just pour a slab and leave.
We have worked on homes all across Springfield, from the older neighborhoods near downtown Main Street to the newer subdivisions on the east and south edges of the city. Springfield is a real city with its own government, its own neighborhoods, and its own identity separate from Eugene. The Dorris Ranch historic filbert orchard and park along the Willamette River is a landmark nearly every Springfield resident knows, and the Thurston area on the east side is a well-established neighborhood with strong community ties.
Homes near the McKenzie or Willamette rivers often sit on low-lying ground with drainage challenges, and the City of Springfield Development and Public Works Department has specific requirements for work in flood zones and drainage easements. We know this area well and design concrete work to handle the conditions on your property, whether you are in an older neighborhood near downtown or a newer subdivision on the east side.
We also work regularly in Albany and Corvallis, and we understand the differences between the mid-valley cities and the Eugene-Springfield metro area.
Call us or fill out the contact form on our website. We reply to every request within one business day. No automated messages, no long waits.
We come to your home, look at the site, check the drainage and soil conditions, and discuss what you need. This visit is free, and we give you a clear written estimate with no hidden costs or surprises.
Once you approve the estimate, we schedule the job and complete the work. Most residential concrete projects take one to three days, depending on size and site conditions.
When the pour is finished, we walk you through the work, answer any questions, and clean up the site. Your new concrete needs at least seven days to cure before heavy use.
We serve homeowners all across Springfield and reply to every request within one business day.
Call (458) 233-8057Springfield is a city of about 62,000 people in Lane County, sitting directly east of Eugene across the Willamette River. The two cities are so close that many people treat them as one metro area, but Springfield has its own government, its own downtown along Main Street, and its own neighborhoods with distinct character. Most of the housing stock was built from the 1950s through the 1970s during the postwar boom, and the majority of homes are ranch-style or simple two-story houses on modest lots. The homeownership rate is above 50 percent, which means most residents own the home they live in and have a stake in maintaining it.
Springfield has a working-class identity tied to the timber and manufacturing industries, and PeaceHealth RiverBend hospital is now one of the city's largest employers. The downtown area along Main Street has seen investment and revitalization in recent years, with new businesses and renovation projects bringing life back to the core. The McKenzie River runs along the north edge of the city before joining the Willamette, and Dorris Ranch along the river is a well-known landmark and park. Newer subdivisions on the east and south edges of the city were built mostly from the 1990s through the 2010s and represent a different housing market than the older core neighborhoods. We also work in Corvallis and Salem, and we understand how the southern Willamette Valley location and heavier rainfall in the Eugene-Springfield area create different conditions than cities farther north.
From the neighborhoods near Dorris Ranch to the east side of the city, we serve all of Springfield with concrete services built to last.