
Redding Concrete Company is Oroville, CA's concrete contractor for floor installations, driveways, patios, and retaining walls - serving Oroville homeowners since 2023, with Butte County permits handled on every qualifying job so your work is documented and inspected.

A large share of Oroville's homes were built in the 1950s and 1960s, and many still have their original garage or utility room slabs - surfaces that have seen 60 or more years of hot summers and wet winters. When those slabs start cracking, flaking, or sitting uneven, replacement is more practical than patching. Learn more about our concrete floor installation process and what proper base preparation means for a floor that lasts in Butte County conditions.
Oroville's mid-century housing stock means a lot of driveways that were poured decades ago without modern base preparation or sealing. The combination of summer heat and winter rain in this part of Butte County is hard on aging concrete - driveways that were never sealed deteriorate faster when UV exposure bakes them dry all summer. We build driveways with the base depth and pour timing that Oroville conditions demand.
Oroville's spring and fall weather - before the summer heat sets in and after the winter rains end - is genuinely good for outdoor living. A well-built concrete patio that sheds water away from the house and holds up through dry summers is a practical addition to any Oroville home. We pour patios with the drainage slope and surface sealing that keep them looking right for years in this climate.
Properties near the Feather River and in Oroville's lower-lying neighborhoods deal with seasonal soil saturation that puts real pressure on any wall holding back a slope or raised planting area. Wet winters along the Feather River corridor mean retaining walls need to be designed with drainage in mind, not just built to hold the load. We design and pour retaining walls for the actual conditions on your Oroville property.
Older Oroville neighborhoods have walkways and front paths that have not been replaced since the original construction - surfaces that are heaved, cracked, and in some cases dangerous to walk on. Butte County's climate cycles from wet winters to dry, hot summers, and that seasonal swing accelerates damage on unsealed older concrete. New concrete installed with proper control joints and base preparation can last another 25 to 30 years.
Oroville homeowners adding outbuildings, covered workshops, or carport slabs to their properties need foundations sized for local soil and drainage conditions. Properties near the Feather River or in low spots require slabs with built-in drainage design so moisture does not collect beneath the concrete over time. We pour slab foundations to current Butte County building standards and pull the required permit before any work begins.
Oroville is the county seat of Butte County and sits at the edge of the Sacramento Valley where the Feather River emerges from the foothills. The city has grown slowly since the mid-20th century, which means much of the housing stock - mostly wood-frame single-family homes built between the 1940s and 1970s - has been in place for 50 to 80 years. Those homes were built with concrete that pre-dates today's base preparation standards, and many original slabs are cracking, settling, or breaking down at the surface. The climate here hits concrete from two directions: summer highs that regularly reach 95 to 100 degrees Fahrenheit, which bake unsealed surfaces and cause improperly poured slabs to surface-crack early, and a winter rainy season from November through March that delivers 25 to 27 inches of annual rainfall. Freeze-thaw cycles happen on winter nights, and combined with summer heat, they accelerate aging in any concrete that was not built with proper joints and drainage.
The Feather River runs through and around the city, and the 2017 Oroville Dam spillway crisis brought national attention to the drainage and flood risk that lower-lying neighborhoods in this area face. Properties near the river or in flood-prone zones have soil conditions that can shift or saturate in wet years, and any concrete poured on that ground needs a base designed for those conditions - not a standard approach that ignores what is actually under the slab. Oroville also has a higher-than-average share of manufactured and mobile homes, which have different foundation needs than site-built homes. A contractor who knows this market understands that no two properties here are identical, and the assessment before the pour matters as much as the pour itself.
We pull permits through the City of Oroville for concrete work in this municipality, and we have been serving Oroville homeowners since we launched in 2023. The mix of housing types here - older wood-frame homes near downtown, mid-century ranch houses across the residential neighborhoods, and manufactured homes throughout the city and surrounding unincorporated areas - is wider than what we encounter in most cities. Each type comes with different base conditions and structural requirements, and we assess each property individually before any design or pricing conversation.
Oroville sits along Highway 70 and State Route 162, with the downtown corridor along Montgomery Street serving as the main commercial spine most residents know well. Lake Oroville - the large reservoir created by the Oroville Dam just east of town - is a landmark that most residents have been to many times, and the Feather River corridor shapes how the entire east side of the city drains and behaves in wet years. We have worked on properties from the older downtown-adjacent neighborhoods to homes near the lake and on the outskirts of the city, and the soil and drainage conditions do differ depending on where you are.
Oroville connects naturally to the broader Sacramento Valley service area we cover. We regularly handle projects in Yuba City to the south, where the flat valley floor and older housing stock share many of the same concrete challenges as Oroville. Homeowners in Paradise to the northeast are also part of our regular coverage - a community rebuilding after the 2018 Camp Fire, with construction needs that require careful attention to local codes and conditions.
Call us or submit through the contact form and we will respond within 1 business day. We will ask about the area size, what the surface will be used for, and whether there is an existing slab that needs to come out - then schedule a free on-site visit to measure and check the ground conditions before giving you any price.
After the site visit, you receive a written estimate that breaks out materials, labor, demolition if needed, and permit fees. This is the right moment to ask about cost, timing, and what the finished project will look like. No commitment required - you review the quote on your own timeline.
We apply for the required City of Oroville permit on your behalf - you do not fill out any forms. Once approved, we schedule the pour around Oroville's weather window. Spring and fall are the preferred seasons, but if the project has to happen in summer, we book early morning starts to protect the concrete from peak heat.
The crew prepares the base, pours the concrete, and finishes the surface. After the pour, we give you a clear day-by-day curing timeline so you know when the floor or surface is ready for normal use. A city inspection confirms the work, and we do a final walkthrough with you before the job is closed out.
We serve Oroville homeowners with free on-site estimates, permits handled, and work built for Butte County conditions. Call or message us - we respond within 1 business day.
(530) 319-6867Oroville is the county seat of Butte County, with a population of around 20,000, located at the point where the Feather River leaves the Sierra Nevada foothills and enters the Sacramento Valley. The city has Gold Rush-era roots - its name comes from the Spanish word for gold - and grew steadily through the mid-20th century as agriculture and government employment anchored the local economy. The housing stock reflects that history: most of the city's residential neighborhoods consist of wood-frame single-family homes built between the 1940s and 1970s, with a meaningful share of manufactured and mobile homes scattered across the city and the surrounding unincorporated areas of Butte County. The Oroville Dam - the tallest dam in the United States at 770 feet - sits just east of town and creates Lake Oroville, a reservoir that most residents have visited many times. The dam and lake define the eastern edge of the city's geography and are a reference point locals use constantly.
The Feather River runs through the city and shapes drainage patterns across Oroville's lower-lying neighborhoods, particularly on the west side. Homes near the river have a different relationship with soil moisture and drainage than properties on higher ground toward the east. Oroville sits about 70 miles north of Sacramento and roughly 25 miles south of Chico, making it a central point in Butte County's service geography. We regularly serve homeowners across this corridor, including in Yuba City to the south and in Paradise to the northeast, where ongoing rebuilding after the 2018 Camp Fire continues to create concrete work of all types.
Durable concrete driveways built to last through years of daily use and Redding weather.
Learn moreCustom concrete patios that extend your outdoor living space with lasting quality.
Learn moreDecorative stamped finishes that replicate stone, brick, or wood at a fraction of the cost.
Learn moreSafe, ADA-compliant concrete sidewalks installed for residential and commercial properties.
Learn moreStrong, smooth garage floor slabs that resist cracking, staining, and heavy vehicle loads.
Learn moreCustom color, texture, and pattern options that turn plain concrete into a design feature.
Learn moreEngineered concrete retaining walls that control erosion and manage sloped terrain.
Learn moreInterior and exterior concrete floors installed level and finished to your specification.
Learn moreSlip-resistant concrete pool decks designed for comfort, safety, and curb appeal.
Learn moreCode-compliant concrete steps built to handle heavy foot traffic with long-term stability.
Learn moreProperly reinforced slab foundations that support structures safely for decades.
Learn moreFull foundation installation services for new builds and major structural projects.
Learn moreCommercial-grade concrete parking lots engineered for heavy traffic and easy maintenance.
Learn morePrecision-poured concrete footings that provide a stable base for any structure.
Learn moreFoundation raising and leveling services to correct settling and restore structural integrity.
Learn moreClean, precise concrete cutting for demolition, repair, and utility access projects.
Learn moreServing these cities and communities.
From garage floor replacements to driveways and patios, Redding Concrete Company serves Oroville homeowners with permits handled, work built for Butte County conditions, and no hidden fees.