Huntington Concrete Company is a licensed concrete contractor serving Huntington, WV, with driveways, patios, and foundation work handled by a crew that works in this city regularly. We have served Huntington homeowners and property owners since 2025, and we understand what West Virginia winters and clay-heavy soil do to concrete here.

Huntington's freeze-thaw winters crack and heave older driveways faster than most homeowners expect. We handle the full process - grading, base prep, pour, and control joints - so your new concrete driveway holds up through Cabell County winters for years to come.
Huntington's clay-heavy soil turns backyards into muddy messes after rain. A properly poured concrete patio with the right gravel base gives you a dry, usable outdoor space year-round, even in the wet springs this area sees along the Ohio River.
Hillside lots throughout Huntington lose soil every time it rains hard. A concrete retaining wall stops that erosion and protects your yard and foundation from the runoff that comes with living on sloped ground in this city.
Many Huntington homes were built before modern foundation standards, and the city's mix of hillside terrain and high annual rainfall creates real settling risk. We pour foundations designed for local soil conditions and the water movement this area sees.
Original front steps on older Huntington homes from the 1920s and 1930s are often crumbling or pulling away from the house. Replacing them with properly reinforced concrete steps improves safety and curb appeal on homes throughout established neighborhoods like Westmoreland and Enslow Park.
New construction and additions in Huntington benefit from slab foundations that account for local drainage patterns and soil composition. Getting the base right the first time prevents the settling and cracking that becomes expensive to fix later on hillside and flat lots alike.
Huntington sits in a climate that is genuinely hard on concrete. Winters bring repeated freeze-thaw cycles, where temperatures drop below freezing overnight and climb back above it during the day. Every cycle forces water in small surface cracks to expand - widening those cracks a little more each time. After a few seasons, what started as a hairline becomes a real structural problem. Add in the 43 inches of annual rainfall and the hilly terrain that channels runoff toward foundations, and you have conditions that demand attention to drainage and proper base prep on every job.
The housing stock here also matters. A large portion of Huntington's homes were built before 1960, with older driveways, original steps, and foundations that have seen decades of West Virginia weather. Homes in neighborhoods like Guyandotte - one of the oldest parts of the city - may have concrete from the 1940s or earlier that has shifted, settled, or begun to fail at the surface. Knowing how to assess what can be repaired versus what needs to come out and be replaced is something that only comes from working in this city regularly.
Our crew works throughout Huntington regularly, pulling permits through the City of Huntington Building and Zoning department for driveway and foundation projects that connect to city streets. We know that hillside lots near 5th Avenue and the neighborhoods above the river require more grading time than flat lots - and we factor that into our estimates rather than surprising you with change orders.
Huntington is a city with distinct character in each part of town. Older brick homes in Westmoreland and Enslow Park have different concrete needs than the wood-frame houses in Guyandotte, and both are different from newer construction near Marshall University. Ritter Park and the surrounding neighborhoods tend to have larger lots with well-maintained properties - homeowners there often want a finish that matches the character of the block.
We also serve the broader tri-state area, including homeowners in Kenova, WV just to the west of Huntington along the river, and in neighboring Ashland, KY across the state line.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form. We respond within 1 business day and ask a few questions about your project before scheduling a site visit.
We come out to look at your property, measure the work area, and assess site conditions. This is when we discuss cost honestly - including any drainage or grading factors specific to your lot - and give you a written quote.
For projects that require a City of Huntington building permit, we handle the application before any work begins. Once approved, we set a start date and tell you what to expect on day one.
Our crew handles demolition, base prep, forming, the pour, and finishing. Before we leave, we walk you through the completed work and give you curing instructions - including how long to stay off the surface.
We serve homeowners and property owners throughout Huntington, WV. Get a free written estimate with no pressure and no obligation. Most estimates are scheduled within a few days.
(304) 802-8567Huntington is West Virginia's second-largest city, with a population of roughly 43,000 to 46,000 people. It sits at the point where West Virginia meets Kentucky and Ohio along the Ohio River, giving it a tri-state character that shapes everything from its workforce to its neighborhoods. The city was founded in 1871 and grew quickly through the early 20th century, which is why so many of its established residential areas - Westmoreland, Enslow Park, and Guyandotte - contain homes from the 1910s through the 1940s. These neighborhoods have their own character: larger brick colonials on tree-lined streets in Westmoreland, tightly spaced wood-frame homes in Guyandotte that date back well over a century. Marshall University sits in the heart of the city, and the area around it mixes long-term owner-occupied homes with student rentals in buildings of varying ages and conditions.
The city's terrain is as varied as its housing stock. Flat lots near the river sit in floodplain areas that see real water during heavy springs, while the hillside neighborhoods above the city deal with runoff, erosion, and foundations that move with the soil. Ritter Park - Huntington's most beloved green space, with its rose garden and walking paths - anchors one of the city's more desirable residential corridors, and homes in that area are generally well-maintained. We work all over the city and know which neighborhoods present what challenges. Homeowners in nearby Barboursville and across the river in Ironton, OH can also reach us for the same concrete services.
Get a durable, professionally finished concrete driveway built to last.
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Learn MoreCall Huntington Concrete Company or send us a message to schedule your free estimate. We serve homeowners and businesses throughout Huntington and the surrounding tri-state area.