Pitt Landscape and Construction

General Contractors License (B-100): 10894545-5501

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Davis County — Between Mountain and Lake

Explore tailored Landscape Design expertise for homes and businesses in Davis County.

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Concrete Contractors in Davis County - Our Project Impact

Pitt Landscape has completed 17 concrete contractors projects in Davis County, totaling $179K in sold work at an average project value of $11K, with crews active in Bountiful, Farmington, Fruit Heights, Kaysville and 2 others throughout Davis County. We've been delivering this work here since April 2021, and that kind of long-standing local presence gives people confidence that we're here to stay.

5.0 / 5from 1 reviewDavis County concrete contractors reviews

37

Total Estimates

$530K

Estimate Revenue

17

Projects Sold

$179K

Sold Revenue

$47K

Top 10 Full-Scope Project Avg

$47K

Design

Project Coverage in Davis County

Track where we're building concrete contractors projects throughout Davis County.

City Summary

North Salt LakeSold Jobs: 4
Sold Revenue
$102,914
Avg. Ticket
$25,729
Fruit HeightsSold Jobs: 2
Sold Revenue
$24,928
Avg. Ticket
$12,464
BountifulSold Jobs: 4
Sold Revenue
$24,718
Avg. Ticket
$6,180
Grand TotalSold Jobs: 17
Sold Revenue
$178,534
Avg. Ticket
$10,502

Concrete Contractors in Davis County

Full-service concrete design and installation across the Salt Lake Valley — patios, driveways, walkways, and decorative finishes. One crew, one contract. Our crews tailor each project to local site conditions, property goals, and the long-term performance expectations for Davis County.

Professional concrete driveway installation with clean finish and proper grading.

Customer Reviews in Davis County

Average rating: 5.0 / 5 (1 review)
Blake Izatt★★★★★

We had a great experience working with Bryan, Ryan and their crew in 2021. They worked with us on designing and implementing a xeriscape on our back yard around a new pickleball court. They also xeriscaped most of our front yard. We appreciated their…

What Shapes Outdoor Work in Davis County

Several site conditions are specific to Davis County and shape how we design outdoor projects here. Canyon winds out of Farmington Canyon and Parrish Canyon create consistent wind exposure on the Kaysville and Farmington benchlands — windbreaks and wind-tolerant plant selection matter more here than in more sheltered Holladay or Draper microclimates. Low-lying areas near the Great Salt Lake and Davis County's western communities — Syracuse, Clinton, and the Clearfield flatlands — can carry elevated soil salinity that limits turf species selection and affects irrigation system efficiency.

The county's rapid residential growth has also left many newer lots with compacted soil, minimal import topsoil, and builder-grade landscaping that's already underperforming by the third summer. A proper soil assessment before any planting or irrigation work often reveals why a lawn is struggling despite consistent watering — and what it would actually take to fix it rather than just maintain it.

Project Gallery Overview

Browse real project shots grouped by service. Each card shows a service—tap to explore that service in detail.

Concrete Built to Survive Utah's Freeze-Thaw Cycle

Concrete in Utah fails for one reason more than any other: the freeze-thaw cycle. Water infiltrates the surface, freezes, expands, and spalls the concrete from the inside out. A Salt Lake Valley concrete project that wasn't designed for this reality looks great for two winters and crumbles in the third.

We've poured concrete for over 417 projects across the Wasatch Front. Every pour starts with the right mix — air-entrained concrete that builds in microscopic air pockets to handle freeze-thaw expansion — combined with proper base depth, control joints at the right spacing, and curing practices matched to Utah's climate. These aren't upgrades. They're how we do it on every project.

We handle the full scope: site measurement and design, excavation and base prep, form work, pour, finish, and sealing. One crew, one contract, no subcontractor coordination on your end.

What We Build — Patios, Driveways, Walkways, and More

Our concrete work covers the full range of residential exterior applications:

  • Patio slabs — The most common request. We size the slab to the space, slope it properly for drainage, and finish it to your specification — broom finish, exposed aggregate, stamped, or smooth trowel.
  • Driveways — Driveways require deeper base depth (10–12 inches) and a thicker slab (5–6 inches) than patios. We also include expansion joints at the garage apron and any point where the driveway meets another surface.
  • Walkways and sidewalks — Entry walks, side-yard paths, and property-line sidewalks. We match slope to existing grades and include control joints every 4–5 feet to prevent random cracking.
  • Steps and landings — Concrete steps at entries, retaining wall transitions, and grade changes. Formed in-place or with precast treads depending on the application.
  • Pool decks — Broom-finish or exposed aggregate for slip resistance. Properly sloped away from the pool and sealed for chlorine resistance.
  • Retaining wall caps — Poured concrete caps on CMU or block retaining walls for a finished, durable top surface.
  • Garage aprons and approach slabs — The transition between driveway and garage door is a high-traffic, high-stress joint. We form this correctly to prevent heaving at the garage threshold.

Exposed Aggregate, Stamped, and Decorative Concrete Options

Standard broom finish is durable and clean — but if you want more, we offer decorative finishes that add character without sacrificing longevity:

Exposed aggregate is our most recommended decorative option for the Salt Lake Valley. The surface is seeded with decorative stone — river rock, granite chips, or colored aggregate — then the paste is washed away to expose the stone. The result is a textured, slip-resistant surface with natural character. It holds up better than stamped concrete in freeze-thaw conditions because there's no surface layer to spall or delaminate.

Stamped concrete mimics the look of stone, brick, or wood using textured forms pressed into fresh concrete. It's paired with integral color or acid stain for realistic effect. Stamped concrete looks excellent but requires periodic resealing (every 2–4 years in Utah) to protect the color layer and surface finish. We recommend it on covered patios or areas with less weather exposure.

Integral color adds pigment throughout the mix — not just on the surface — so scratches and chips don't expose gray concrete underneath. Works with broom, trowel, or exposed aggregate finishes.

Broom finish remains the right choice for most driveways, walkways, and utility pads. Reliable slip resistance, minimal maintenance, and the most economical decorative option.

Why Concrete Fails — and What We Do Differently

Most concrete failures in Utah trace back to one of three causes, all of which are preventable:

Inadequate base depth. Concrete laid on poorly compacted or shallow base material settles unevenly and cracks. Our standard base depth is 6–8 inches for patios and walkways, 10–12 inches for driveways. All base material is compacted in lifts with a plate compactor, not just dumped and screeded.

Missing or misplaced control joints. Concrete shrinks as it cures. Without control joints at regular intervals, that shrinkage produces random cracks in the middle of the slab. We cut or tool control joints every 10 feet (or less on wider slabs) to direct cracking to the joint where it's invisible and harmless.

Wrong concrete mix for the climate. Air-entrained concrete — specified to 5–7% air content — is standard practice in Utah. The air voids absorb freeze-thaw expansion that would otherwise spall a dense mix. We specify this mix on every residential pour, not as an upcharge.

We also seal every concrete surface at completion with a penetrating silane-siloxane sealer. It reduces water infiltration and extends the life of decorative finishes.

Our Concrete Process — Consultation to Completion

  1. Free on-site estimate — We measure the area, assess existing grades and drainage, review finish options, and check for underground utilities before quoting.
  2. Design and proposal — Written proposal covering dimensions, base depth, finish specification, control joint layout, and total cost. Fixed price — no change orders for normal site conditions.
  3. Excavation and base prep — We excavate to required depth, haul off material, bring in road base, and compact in lifts. This phase determines the long-term performance of the finished slab.
  4. Form work — Steel or wood forms set to grade and slope. Slope is critical — water should drain away from structures at a minimum 1/8 inch per foot.
  5. Pour and finish — Concrete ordered to our spec (air-entrained, correct PSI for application). Poured, screeded, and finished to the agreed surface texture. Control joints cut within 24 hours of pour.
  6. Curing and sealing — Curing compound or wet cure for the first 7 days. Penetrating sealer applied at 28 days after the concrete has reached design strength.

Most residential concrete projects run 1–3 days on-site. Larger driveways or multi-phase projects may run 5–7 days. We'll give you a specific schedule with your proposal.

Concrete Cost in the Salt Lake Valley

Concrete pricing in Utah varies by finish type, base depth requirement, and project complexity:

  • Broom finish patio (standard base): $10–$16 per square foot installed
  • Exposed aggregate patio: $14–$20 per square foot
  • Stamped concrete (single color): $16–$24 per square foot
  • Stamped concrete (multiple colors or complex pattern): $22–$35 per square foot
  • Standard driveway replacement: $12–$18 per square foot (heavier base included)

A typical 300 sq ft broom-finish patio runs $3,500–$5,500 installed. A full driveway replacement (600–900 sq ft) typically runs $8,000–$18,000 depending on size and grade complexity. We'll give you an exact price after the free on-site estimate — every site is different enough that square-foot ranges can mislead.

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