
Premier Cheyenne Concrete delivers concrete contractor services in Greeley, CO, including parking lot building, driveway construction, and foundation work - responding to new inquiries within 1 business day.

Greeley has a large share of rental properties and small commercial spaces - particularly near the University of Northern Colorado campus - where a functional, durable paved surface matters for tenants and customers. We build concrete parking lots on Weld County's clay-heavy soils with the base prep and drainage needed to prevent cracking, heaving, and standing water after snowmelt.
A large share of Greeley's housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1980s, and driveways from that era are often showing their age after decades of Weld County freeze-thaw cycles and expansive clay soils that shift with every rain. A new driveway built with proper base compaction and cold-climate concrete mix will outlast the original by 20 years or more.
The older neighborhoods near downtown Greeley and the UNC campus have sidewalk panels that have been pushed up and cracked by tree roots and decades of ground frost. Replacing heaved panels removes a tripping hazard and brings properties into compliance with city sidewalk maintenance standards.
Building on Greeley's expansive clay soil - which can swell and shrink by inches with moisture changes - requires foundations designed specifically for that movement. We pour slab foundations with proper depth, reinforcement, and drainage to keep new structures stable through Weld County's wet springs and dry summers.
Victorian and Craftsman-era homes near downtown Greeley and the UNC area often have original entry steps that have cracked, settled, or shifted after 80 to 100 years of Weld County winters. New concrete steps built to current standards are a safety and appearance upgrade that holds up through the area's hard freeze-thaw cycles.
Greeley sits on the open high plains at about 4,658 feet elevation with nothing blocking the wind, and that combination of wind, intense summer UV, and hard winters is genuinely tough on concrete and masonry. The city averages around 50 inches of snow per year, and the ground freezes to depths of 30 inches or more through a typical Weld County winter. Frost that deep puts real pressure on concrete slabs, footings, and anything embedded in the ground - surfaces that were poured without accounting for that freeze depth start to crack and heave predictably over time. This area sits squarely in what meteorologists call Hail Alley, and severe hailstorms from May through August regularly damage exposed surfaces.
The soil under most of Greeley is the larger problem that many contractors miss. The Colorado Geological Survey identifies expansive clay soils as a major hazard throughout the Weld County area. These soils swell when they absorb moisture and shrink when they dry out - a cycle that happens every spring and summer. Over time, that movement is one of the primary reasons Greeley homeowners see cracked driveways, sticking doors, and uneven floors. A concrete project in Greeley that skips proper soil assessment and base preparation is likely to show problems within a few years, regardless of how good the surface finish looks on pour day.
We work across Greeley's full range of property types - from the older Victorian and Craftsman-era homes near downtown and around the University of Northern Colorado campus to the newer subdivisions spreading north and east of the city. The rental property concentration near UNC means we also handle work for landlords who need reliable concrete repairs and replacements between tenants.
The roads we travel most often in Greeley include US-34 heading west toward Loveland, US-85 running south toward the Denver metro, and Highway 392 connecting to Windsor and Fort Collins. The Island Grove Regional Park complex in central Greeley - home to the annual Greeley Stampede - is a useful landmark for understanding where the city's older core neighborhoods are relative to the newer development on the outer edges.
We also serve homeowners in Loveland to the west and Longmont to the south - both within a reasonable drive for our Greeley crews.
We respond to new Greeley inquiries within 1 business day and set up an in-person site visit. Most homeowners and property owners find that a direct look at the site answers questions that photos simply cannot.
We assess your site - checking soil conditions, existing drainage, and what demolition is needed - then give you a written estimate covering all costs before you commit. If a permit is required, that cost and timeline are included upfront, so there are no surprises.
We pull any required City of Greeley permit on your behalf. Then we remove the existing surface, grade and compact the base to account for Weld County clay, and pour concrete using a mix suited to the local freeze-thaw conditions. We also monitor wind and weather before scheduling the pour, since Greeley's open-plains winds can dry fresh concrete too fast.
After a minimum of seven days of curing - longer if conditions require it - we walk the finished work with you, confirm the drainage is correct, and explain how to protect the surface through Greeley's first hard freeze of the season.
We serve Greeley homeowners and property owners from the older UNC-area neighborhoods to the new builds on the north and east sides of town. Call or fill out the form and we will respond within 1 business day.
(307) 475-1948Greeley is the county seat of Weld County and home to about 108,000 people, making it one of the larger cities on Colorado's Front Range. The University of Northern Colorado sits near the center of the city and enrolls around 10,000 students, shaping the character of the neighborhoods south and west of downtown - areas with a high concentration of older homes, many of which have been converted to rental units. The Greeley Stampede, held every summer at Island Grove Regional Park, is one of the largest Fourth of July rodeo events in the country and a fixture of city identity. Weld County's oil and gas industry brings a steady stream of workers to the area, keeping housing demand high and the local economy active year-round.
The housing stock spans a wide range of ages. The blocks nearest downtown and the UNC campus include Victorian and Craftsman-style homes built in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The bulk of the city's residential neighborhoods were built between the 1950s and 1980s - typically ranch-style homes with concrete driveways, attached or detached garages, and modest lots. Newer subdivisions are spreading on the north and east sides of the city, with two-car garage homes on 6,000 to 8,000 square foot lots. These newer builds are reaching their first concrete maintenance cycle at the same time older properties need replacement. Nearby, Longmont sits to the south along US-287, and we serve both communities. We also work in Loveland, about 25 miles to the west via US-34.
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From parking lots and driveways to sidewalks and foundations, we handle all concrete work in Greeley and respond to every inquiry within 1 business day.