The structural backbone of your home or building — poured right the first time, built for Wyoming's soil conditions and frost depths.
Call for a Free EstimateEvery structure is only as good as the foundation beneath it. In Wyoming, that means accounting for our deep frost lines, varying soil conditions across Fremont and Hot Springs counties, and the kind of structural loads that come with full-size homes, garages, shops, and outbuildings.
Day Concrete LLC has been pouring foundations and slabs across the Wind River region for over 20 years. We understand Wyoming soil, we pull proper permits, and we don't cut corners on rebar placement, concrete mix design, or curing time. The foundation work we do today determines how your structure performs for the next 50 years.
From a simple garage slab to a full residential foundation, we have the experience to get it done right.
The most common foundation type for homes, shops, and garages in Wyoming. We pour a reinforced concrete slab directly on a prepared and compacted gravel base, with footings extending below the frost line where required.
Stem wall foundations that elevate the structure above grade and create a crawl space below. Common in parts of Fremont County and necessary for certain building configurations. We form and pour the stem walls and footings.
A properly poured garage or shop slab can handle decades of heavy vehicle traffic, floor jacks, compressors, and equipment. We pour 4" to 6" slabs with proper reinforcement and saw-cut control joints.
A slab and footing poured as one continuous piece — efficient and cost-effective for smaller structures. The thickened edges act as the footing while the interior slab carries floor loads.
Reinforced concrete pads for HVAC units, generators, pressure tanks, or agricultural equipment. Designed for static load requirements and poured level and true to your specifications.
We work on commercial and agricultural buildings throughout the region. Larger footprints, heavier loads, and tighter tolerances — we have the experience and equipment to handle them all.
Soil conditions vary widely across Fremont and Hot Springs counties. The soils in Riverton behave differently than those near Lander or Dubois. Frost depth requirements, drainage conditions, and load requirements all affect how a foundation should be designed and poured.
over 20 years of experience in this region means we've seen every situation — expansive soils, high groundwater, rocky substrate, sloped sites. We ask the right questions before we pour the first yard of concrete, so there are no surprises after the structure goes up.
A foundation poured right the first time saves you from problems that are expensive and painful to fix later. Get a free estimate today.