Huntington Concrete Company is a concrete contractor serving Flatwoods, WV, with garage floor replacement, driveways, steps, patios, and retaining walls built for the wooded hillside lots and pre-1980 housing stock of Braxton County. We respond within one business day and understand the specific drainage and subbase challenges that come with sloped rural properties and central West Virginia's hard freeze-thaw winters.

Many Flatwoods and Braxton County homes have attached garages where the original floor was poured directly on unprepared or poorly graded subbase - a common shortcut on rural properties built before 1980. Our garage floor concrete service removes failed slabs, graders the subbase correctly, and pours a properly reinforced replacement that handles the moisture and freeze-thaw stress that is part of every central West Virginia winter.
Flatwoods properties often have long driveways running down sloped hillside lots where water concentrates along the drive and saturates the soil beneath the slab every spring. Getting the grade and cross-slope right at installation - so water sheds off the surface rather than pooling - is what determines whether a driveway lasts 30 years or starts cracking through within five.
The hilly terrain throughout Braxton County means many residential properties need retaining walls to create usable yard space or protect the foundation from soil creep on steeper lots. Clay-heavy soils in this area hold water and exert significant pressure on wall structures after heavy rain, so proper drainage relief behind the wall is not optional - it is what keeps the wall standing season after season.
Older homes in Flatwoods and throughout rural Braxton County often have front entry steps that are spalling, separating from the foundation, or have heaved to a point where they are a genuine fall hazard. Replacing deteriorated steps with properly formed and reinforced concrete eliminates the hazard and improves the appearance of the property without a large investment.
Wooded lots in Braxton County have natural shade that makes outdoor living comfortable in summer, but those same tree canopies mean patios stay damp longer after rain and are more prone to moss and surface freeze damage in winter. A properly pitched concrete patio with a sealed surface handles those conditions without becoming a slipping hazard or cracking through within the first few years.
Many Flatwoods properties along US Route 19 and in the adjacent residential streets have walkways and paths that connect the driveway to the front door across sloped or uneven ground. A well-formed concrete walkway with proper step transitions and edge drainage stays safe in winter ice conditions and does not heave the way a poorly graded path does after a few freeze-thaw seasons.
Flatwoods sits at the junction of Interstate 79 and US Route 19 in Braxton County, in the heavily forested hill country of central West Virginia. Most of the housing stock in the area was built before 1980, and many homes sit on wooded lots with significant grade changes between the road and the house. The soil throughout Braxton County is clay-heavy and slow to drain, which means water collects around foundations and under concrete slabs rather than moving away quickly after rain. This persistent moisture, combined with the hard winters common at central West Virginia's elevation, makes concrete in this area degrade faster than it would on a flat, well-drained lot.
Central West Virginia typically receives 45 to 50 inches of rain per year, and Flatwoods can see 20 to 40 inches of snow in a heavy winter. The freeze-thaw cycle that runs from roughly December through March is the primary driver of concrete deterioration here - temperatures cross 32 degrees many times each season, and each freeze-thaw cycle expands and contracts whatever water has worked its way into a slab. On sloped lots, this problem is compounded because water naturally concentrates at the bottom of every grade change, which is often right where a garage floor meets the driveway apron or where a retaining wall base sits. Concrete that was installed without attention to subbase drainage in this climate will crack and fail consistently.
Our crew works throughout Flatwoods and Braxton County regularly, and the wooded, hilly properties here are a type of site we know well. The mix of in-town homes near the I-79 interchange and rural properties on back roads outside of Flatwoods means we work in both compact residential settings and on larger rural parcels with long driveways, outbuildings, and septic systems - a different set of site logistics than a typical suburban job.
Interstate 79 and US Route 19 define the geography of Flatwoods - the interchange is the practical center of the community, and most residents are familiar with Sutton Lake just a few miles away on the Elk River, the most popular outdoor recreation spot in Braxton County. The county seat is in nearby Sutton, where the Flatwoods Monster Museum has made Braxton County a recognized stop for visitors from across West Virginia.
We also regularly serve homeowners in Beckley, WV to the south along I-79 and throughout the surrounding coalfield communities, where the hilly terrain and older housing stock present similar concrete challenges to what we work on in Flatwoods every season.
Reach us by phone or through the online form. We respond to all Flatwoods and Braxton County inquiries within one business day to schedule an on-site visit.
We come to the property, assess the slope, drainage, and existing concrete condition, and give you a written estimate with the full scope and cost before scheduling any work. There are no add-ons after the job starts.
We handle demo of the old concrete, proper subbase preparation for the sloped lot conditions specific to your property, forming, and the pour itself. Most Flatwoods residential projects are done in one to two days.
After the pour we walk you through the curing schedule - when to keep traffic off it, when it is safe to drive on, and what to expect in cold weather - and we leave the site cleaned up. Call us with any questions after we leave.
We serve Flatwoods and the surrounding Braxton County communities. Call us or fill out the form and we will get back to you within one business day.
(304) 802-8567Flatwoods is a small city in Braxton County, West Virginia, located at the intersection of Interstate 79 and US Route 19 in the heart of the state. The city is best known outside West Virginia as the home of the 1952 Flatwoods Monster sighting, a piece of local history that still draws attention and is celebrated at the Flatwoods Monster museum in nearby Sutton. The landscape around Flatwoods is heavily forested and hilly, with the Elk River running through Braxton County and Sutton Lake - a large U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reservoir - drawing residents and visitors from across central West Virginia. Housing in the area ranges from in-town homes near the interstate exit to rural properties on wooded lots and hillside roads spread across the county.
Braxton County has a high rate of owner-occupied homes and a predominantly rural character outside of Flatwoods and the county seat of Sutton. Most homes in the county were built before 1980, and the combination of older construction, sloped wooded lots, clay soils, and central West Virginia winters creates consistent demand for concrete repair and replacement work throughout the area. We cover Flatwoods and serve communities throughout Braxton County, including homeowners who travel US Route 19 regularly toward Beckley, WV to the south, where the same hilly terrain and older housing stock create similar concrete needs.
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Learn MoreBraxton County properties need concrete built for sloped lots and hard winters. Contact us and we will schedule your on-site assessment within one business day.