
ClearPath La Mesa Concrete is a licensed concrete contractor serving San Diego with foundation installation, driveways, pool decks, and flatwork across the city's neighborhoods. We respond within 1 business day and handle permits through the San Diego Development Services Department so your project stays on track.

San Diego's mix of postwar slab homes and newer ADU additions creates steady demand for new foundation pours. We install reinforced foundations for garages, accessory structures, and home additions, handling city permit coordination from the start. Learn more about our foundation installation work.
San Diego's outdoor lifestyle means pool decks see heavy use all year. We pour and finish concrete pool decks with texture and slip resistance for the city's sun-intense climate, where UV exposure breaks down unsealed surfaces faster than in cooler regions.
Many San Diego driveways were poured during the postwar building boom of the 1950s and 1960s and are now cracking after decades of clay soil movement. We replace and install new concrete driveways with proper expansion jointing to handle San Diego's wet-dry seasonal cycle.
Slab-on-grade construction is the dominant foundation type across San Diego's residential neighborhoods. Whether you need a new slab for a detached garage, workshop, or permitted ADU, we pour reinforced slabs that meet city building inspection requirements.
San Diego's mild winters and long outdoor season make backyard patios one of the most-used surfaces on any property. We pour patios with proper drainage slopes so winter rain moves away from the structure and does not pond against the house foundation.
San Diego's hillside neighborhoods from Clairemont to Normal Heights have many properties that depend on retaining walls to hold sloped yards in place. We build poured concrete and block walls that meet city permit requirements and handle the drainage design required on sloped lots.
San Diego is the eighth-largest city in the United States, covering roughly 372 square miles. The housing stock spans a wide range - from 1910s Craftsman bungalows in North Park and South Park to 1960s ranch homes in Clairemont, and tile-roof tract homes built in the 1980s and 1990s in communities like Scripps Ranch and Mira Mesa. What they share is age: a large share of San Diego's housing was built between 1945 and 1985, and concrete from that era is now cracking, settling, and reaching the end of its useful life. Clay soils across the inland neighborhoods swell when winter rains arrive and shrink during the long dry season, and that repeated cycle stresses every concrete surface on the property.
San Diego also has over 100 distinct neighborhoods, each with its own character, housing type, and permit jurisdiction. Permitted work goes through the San Diego Development Services Department. Contractors who try to skip permits or don't know the city's inspection process end up creating liability for homeowners. We pull city permits on every project that requires one and coordinate the inspection schedule so you don't have to manage that process yourself.
Our crew works throughout San Diego regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete contractor work here. San Diego is not one neighborhood - it is dozens, and the concrete work in North Park on a 1920s Craftsman lot is a different job from a pool deck replacement in a 1990s Scripps Ranch backyard or a foundation pour for an ADU in Clairemont.
We are familiar with the major corridors that define different parts of the city - Mission Valley, the 8 freeway corridor, El Cajon Boulevard in the east, and the neighborhoods that step up from the coast into the inland hills. The city's stucco-and-slab construction is consistent across decades of building, but soil conditions, drainage patterns, and lot shapes vary considerably from one part of the city to another. Near Balboa Park and older central neighborhoods, lots tend to be smaller and access tighter. Farther out in newer suburban tracts, lots are larger but the original concrete is now 30 to 40 years old and showing its age.
We also serve National City and Chula Vista, both directly south of San Diego. If your project is near either of those borders, we cover it without issue.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form with a description of what you need. We respond within 1 business day and schedule a site visit that fits your availability.
We come to the property to assess the site, soil, access, and scope. Pricing in San Diego varies by neighborhood, lot complexity, and permit requirements. You receive a detailed, written estimate before any commitment is made.
For permitted projects, we submit to the San Diego Development Services Department and coordinate the inspection schedule. Once permits are approved, we confirm your start date and stick to it.
We complete the work, pass all required inspections, and leave the site clean. You get a walkthrough of the finished work before we consider the job done.
We serve homeowners across San Diego's neighborhoods. No pressure, no obligation - just a straight conversation about what you need and what it will cost.
(858) 723-7450San Diego sits at the southwestern corner of the continental United States, bordered by the Pacific Ocean to the west and Mexico to the south. With about 1.4 million residents inside city limits and more than 3 million across the county, it is the eighth-largest city in the country and the largest in San Diego County. The city has over 100 officially recognized communities, each with distinct character. Neighborhoods closer to the coast - Hillcrest, North Park, Mission Hills, and Ocean Beach - tend to have older housing stock and smaller lots. Communities farther inland and north, like Rancho Bernardo and Scripps Ranch, are largely 1970s through 1990s planned suburbs with larger homes on bigger lots. For concrete work, that range means everything from tight urban lots with limited equipment access to open suburban yards where larger jobs move faster.
The city's defining landmarks include Balboa Park, home to 17 museums and the San Diego Zoo, and the Gaslamp Quarter in downtown, which marks the historic commercial core. The military has a strong presence throughout the city, with bases including Naval Base San Diego and Marine Corps Air Station Miramar shaping the neighborhoods around them. Concrete work in San Diego ranges from pool decks in the coastal suburbs to ADU foundations in older inland neighborhoods. La Mesa sits just to the east of San Diego's city limits and is one of the neighboring communities we regularly serve alongside the city itself.
Get a durable, professionally built concrete driveway that adds lasting curb appeal.
Learn MoreTransform your outdoor space with a solid, beautifully finished concrete patio.
Learn MoreAdd texture and character to any surface with decorative stamped concrete.
Learn MoreSafe, level concrete sidewalks built to code for homes and businesses.
Learn MoreEnhance any surface with custom decorative concrete finishes and colors.
Learn MoreSturdy retaining walls that control erosion and define your landscape.
Learn MoreProfessional concrete floor installation for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreWell-crafted concrete steps that are safe, sturdy, and visually appealing.
Learn MoreReliable slab foundations built to support your structure for decades.
Learn MoreExpert foundation installation to give your building a solid start.
Learn MoreDurable concrete parking lots for commercial properties and high-traffic areas.
Learn MoreProperly engineered concrete footings to anchor walls, decks, and structures.
Learn MoreRestore and raise settled foundations to protect your property's integrity.
Learn MoreWe serve homeowners across San Diego - call today or submit a request and we will get back to you within 1 business day.