
Burlington Concrete Company is a concrete contractor serving Montpelier, VT, providing foundation installation, driveway building, sidewalk repair, and retaining walls for homes across the city. We have worked on Montpelier properties throughout the area and respond to every inquiry within one business day.

A large share of Montpelier homes were built before 1940 on stone rubble or early brick foundations that were never designed for modern loads or Vermont frost depths. Our foundation installation service replaces failing foundations with poured-concrete walls built to current code, giving older Montpelier homes a solid base for the next century.
Montpelier driveways face the same punishment as every Vermont surface - 80 inches of snow a year and repeated freeze-thaw cycles that crack and heave surfaces not built to spec. A properly poured driveway with the right mix and reinforcement handles those conditions for decades rather than needing patching every other spring.
Montpelier sidewalks in the older in-town neighborhoods heave and crack from frost every winter, and the city expects property owners to maintain the walks fronting their lots. Replacing broken sections with properly reinforced concrete at the correct frost-depth base prevents the heaving cycle from repeating.
Montpelier sits where two rivers meet, and the hillside neighborhoods above downtown have grade changes that need solid retaining walls to prevent soil from washing out during the spring thaw and the wet summers that can follow. Concrete walls hold their position where timber and block walls eventually shift under saturated soil pressure.
The Victorian and Colonial homes on Montpelier streets often have front steps that have settled or cracked from frost heave. Poured concrete steps stay level and shed water properly, which matters on steep city lots where ice on a tilted step is a genuine safety problem every winter morning.
Montpelier homes near the Winooski River that flooded in 2023 often need basement floor replacement - original poured floors or old stone-and-dirt floors that took on water and sediment require full removal and replacement before a basement can be safely used again. A new concrete floor also provides a moisture barrier that older basement slabs never had.
Montpelier is Vermont's capital and also one of its oldest cities, with a housing stock where a significant portion of homes date to the late 1800s and early 1900s. Many of these homes sit on stone rubble or early brick foundations that were built before poured concrete was standard practice. Those foundation types are genuinely vulnerable to Vermont frost cycles - every winter, ground moisture freezes and expands against stone and mortar joints, slowly opening gaps that water then enters. Over 80 or 100 years, that process can move a foundation wall out of plumb or crack it through. Contractors unfamiliar with pre-1940 construction can underestimate what is involved in stabilizing or replacing these older systems.
The July 2023 flooding brought the Winooski River into downtown Montpelier and many surrounding neighborhoods. Homes that were submerged took on water through foundation walls, basement windows, and floor drains - and the damage to foundations, floor slabs, and exterior concrete was severe in many cases. Even homes that did not flood saw saturated soil conditions for months afterward, which increased hydrostatic pressure against foundation walls. Addressing that kind of damage requires a contractor who understands water management and foundation repair, not just standard flatwork. Soil conditions in Montpelier's lower neighborhoods are also clay-heavy, which holds moisture and amplifies freeze-thaw stress on any concrete or masonry in contact with the ground.
Our crew works throughout Montpelier regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. The city is compact - most homes sit on small lots with close neighbors, narrow driveways, and limited space for equipment staging. The dense in-town blocks near the Vermont State House along Barre Street and East State Street have the oldest homes and the tightest access - we plan for that when scheduling pours and deliveries.
Hubbard Park sits directly above the city's west side, and the hillside streets below it have steeper grades and more significant drainage challenges than the flatter streets near the river. We factor in slope and drainage on every estimate for those neighborhoods, because a driveway or patio poured without proper grading on a Montpelier hillside lot will pool water toward the house rather than away from it.
We also serve neighboring communities near Montpelier - including Barre, just a few miles south, where the granite industry shaped a town full of older homes with their own distinct concrete and foundation needs. If you are in the Montpelier area and need a contractor who knows this part of Vermont, call us.
Call or submit the contact form with a brief description of what you need. We reply within one business day to schedule a site visit - Montpelier is well within our regular service area.
We visit your Montpelier property, assess the site conditions, and give you a written estimate with a clear price before any work starts. For foundation work specifically, we look at the existing structure and soil conditions - that determines the real scope and cost, not a number pulled from a formula.
We handle permits, material delivery, and all site work on the agreed schedule. You do not need to be home during the pour, but we will coordinate access with you beforehand.
We clean up the site when work is finished and walk you through curing timelines and any care instructions - especially important for foundation work and poured slabs in Vermont's climate.
We serve Montpelier and the surrounding area. Call us or fill out the form and we will get back to you within one business day.
(802) 307-0462Montpelier is the smallest state capital in the United States, with a population of around 8,000 people - but that small size is part of what makes it distinctive. The city sits at the confluence of the Winooski River and the North Branch River, surrounded by forested hills on three sides. The downtown is compact and walkable, centered around the gold-domed Vermont State House, with state government serving as the largest employer in the city. Neighborhoods like Berlin Street, the area around East State Street, and the hillside streets climbing toward Hubbard Park are dense with Victorian-era homes, two-story Colonials, and early 20th-century houses - most of them owner-occupied and well-maintained by long-term residents.
The housing stock in Montpelier skews older than almost anywhere else in Vermont. Many homes were built before World War II and still have original or early-replacement foundations, wood siding, and porches that require skilled tradespeople who understand pre-modern construction. The city experienced severe flooding from the Winooski River in July 2023, which damaged hundreds of properties and created significant demand for foundation repair and concrete replacement work across the lower neighborhoods. For homeowners in neighboring communities like Barre or Williston, we serve those areas as well and understand how conditions vary across the central Vermont region.
Get a durable, professionally finished concrete driveway built to last.
Learn MoreEnjoy a beautiful outdoor patio with expert concrete construction.
Learn MoreSafe, level concrete sidewalks installed for homes and businesses.
Learn MoreSolid concrete retaining walls that control erosion and add structure.
Learn MorePrecision concrete floor installation for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreCode-compliant concrete steps built for safety and curb appeal.
Learn MoreStrong slab foundations poured to support your structure for decades.
Learn MoreExpert foundation installation with proper drainage and load-bearing design.
Learn MoreCommercial-grade concrete parking lots built to handle heavy traffic.
Learn MoreCall us today or fill out the estimate form - we respond within one business day and serve homeowners throughout the Montpelier region.