
Anchorage summers are short and worth every minute. We build concrete patios with the base preparation and cold-climate materials that keep your outdoor space level, crack-free, and usable season after season.

Concrete patio construction in Anchorage involves removing existing vegetation or surface material, excavating and compacting a gravel base deep enough to handle Alaska ground conditions, building formwork, and pouring a slab - most residential projects take one to two days of active work, plus several days before the surface is ready for normal use.
A lot of Anchorage homeowners have been living with a yard that is just grass or bare ground because they keep putting off the decision. The short summer season makes it feel like there is never a good time to start. But that is exactly why reaching out early matters - once June hits, contractor schedules fill up fast and many projects get pushed to the following year.
If you want to add texture, color, or a unique look to your patio surface, our stamped concrete services give you a range of pattern and finish options that work well alongside standard flatwork.
If your yard is just grass, gravel, or bare dirt with no defined space for furniture or gathering, you are missing out on what Anchorage summers have to offer. A patio gives you a flat, clean surface that makes outdoor living practical during the months that matter.
Concrete that has shifted, cracked significantly, or developed low spots where water collects is a safety hazard - and a sign the underlying base has failed. If you can see gaps wider than a quarter inch or sections that have tilted, the slab has reached the end of its useful life. Frost heave is the most common cause in Anchorage.
Older wood decks that have been through years of freeze-thaw cycles, snow loads, and moisture often reach a point where repairs cost more than replacement. If your deck feels soft underfoot or has boards that are visibly splitting, a concrete patio is a lower-maintenance alternative that will not rot.
If water pools near your foundation or runs toward your house after rain or snowmelt, your outdoor grading is working against you. A properly installed concrete patio slopes away from the house. Replacing a poorly graded surface with a patio designed for correct drainage can protect your foundation from long-term moisture damage.
We handle every part of the project - site clearing, excavation, gravel base compaction, formwork, the pour itself, surface finishing, and control joint cutting. The base preparation we use accounts for Anchorage frost depth and soil conditions, so your patio stays level through winter ground movement instead of tilting and cracking within a few seasons. Every project includes a walkthrough after the pour so you know exactly how to care for the surface through the curing period.
For homeowners who want to extend their outdoor space further, we also offer concrete pool decks using the same frost-resistant base standards. All decorative and finish options are built on the same structural foundation - you are not trading durability for looks.
The most durable and practical choice for Anchorage - textured surface for safe footing, minimal maintenance.
Pressed patterns that mimic stone, brick, or wood - adds visual interest while keeping the structural benefits of concrete.
Integral color mixed through the full slab depth - won't chip or wear off the way surface-applied stains do.
The surface stones are revealed after the pour for a natural, slip-resistant finish that works well with Anchorage's landscape.
Frost heave is the most common reason Anchorage patios fail. The ground freezes and thaws each year, and a slab built without a base that accounts for local frost depth will shift, tilt, and crack within a few seasons. Parts of Anchorage - particularly lower-lying areas near Cook Inlet and neighborhoods like Turnagain - sit on soils that move more than average as they freeze and thaw. The 1964 Good Friday Earthquake demonstrated just how unstable some of that ground can be under stress. A contractor who knows these conditions will adjust base depth and compaction methods for your specific yard, not a one-size-fits-all approach. For more on Anchorage-area soil conditions, the Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys maintains detailed local data.
We serve homeowners across Anchorage and the region. Customers in Palmer and Wasilla face similar freeze-thaw challenges and receive the same base preparation standards on every project.
We respond within 1 business day. Tell us about your yard and what you have in mind. We schedule a free on-site visit - no quote is given without seeing the space first.
We check drainage, soil conditions, and the size of the area, then walk through finish options that fit your budget. You get a written estimate breaking down every cost before any work begins.
We handle the Municipality of Anchorage permit process on your behalf. Once permits are in hand, we give you a firm start date - and we hold to it, because we know how short the season is.
We clear the area, compact the gravel base, pour and finish the slab, and cut control joints. The surface is ready for light use in 24 to 48 hours, and fully cured over about 28 days.
We respond within 1 business day. There is no obligation - just a written estimate after a free on-site visit. Anchorage contractor schedules fill up fast in summer, so the sooner you reach out, the better your chances of getting on this season's calendar.
(907) 202-5481We hold a current Alaska contractor registration, which you can verify through the State of Alaska. Every project carries full liability coverage so your property is protected from day one.
We handle all Municipality of Anchorage permit paperwork and schedule the municipal inspection. You do not make a single city call. The inspection record protects you if you ever sell your home.
We adjust base depth and compaction for your specific lot - not a one-size-fits-all spec. Hillside lots, lower-lying yards near wetlands, and neighborhoods with soft soils all get the preparation their conditions require.
We give you a firm start date and keep it. Anchorage's concrete season runs late May through early September - we plan carefully and do not overbook so your project stays on track.
Putting these details together - the right base, the right mix, the permits handled, the schedule honored - is what produces a patio that looks as good in year five as it did when it was poured. For more on contractor licensing in Alaska, see the Alaska Division of Corporations, Business and Professional Licensing.
Add custom patterns and textures to your patio surface - stamped finishes that mimic stone or brick while keeping the durability of concrete.
Learn MoreExtend your outdoor concrete work around a pool area with a slip-resistant, frost-resistant deck built to the same base standards.
Learn MoreContractor schedules in Anchorage fill up by June - reach out now to lock in your start date and make the most of summer.