
Advanced Canton Concrete is the concrete contractor Randolph homeowners call for driveways, patios, sidewalks, and foundations. We have served this part of Norfolk County since 2016, handling permits through the Randolph Building Department and responding to every inquiry within one business day.

Most Randolph driveways were poured in the 1960s through 1980s, and decades of freeze-thaw cycles have caught up with them. We build new concrete driveways on a properly compacted base, with the pour thickness and joint placement to handle Randolph winters without premature cracking. If your driveway has heaved or developed deep cracks, replacement is often more cost-effective than repeated patching - learn more about concrete driveway building.
Randolph lots tend to be modest in size, which means a well-built concrete patio adds meaningful outdoor living space without eating into the yard. We design and pour patios that drain properly, stay level through seasonal ground movement, and hold up to the heavy use typical of family homes in this part of town.
Heaved and cracked front walkways are a safety issue and a common problem in Randolph, where mature tree roots have been pushing against concrete for 40 to 50 years in many neighborhoods. We remove damaged sections, address the underlying cause where possible, and pour new sidewalks to current code and grade.
Randolph sits on glacially deposited soils with significant clay content in many areas, and that clay shifts with every wet season. Homes built in the postwar decades often have foundations that are now showing stress cracks or signs of water infiltration. We handle foundation installation, slab pours, and structural repairs for homes throughout town.
Some Randolph properties have sloped yards where soil erosion and washout are a recurring problem, especially on the east side of town where grades can be significant. A properly built concrete retaining wall holds back soil, protects the foundation from water pressure, and creates flat, usable space in a yard that would otherwise be difficult to maintain.
Front entry steps on older Randolph homes often settle unevenly as the ground shifts below them. Cracked or tilted steps are a tripping hazard and can discourage buyers if you sell. We replace deteriorated steps with solid concrete construction that sits on a proper footing, built to hold its position through the freeze-thaw cycles that Randolph winters deliver every year.
Randolph is a town where most of the housing stock went up between the 1950s and 1980s, and a lot of that original concrete work - driveways, walkways, and front steps - is now past its service life. The freeze-thaw cycles that run from November through March have put years of stress on those surfaces, and the clay-heavy soils common in eastern Massachusetts compound the problem by shifting underneath slabs as moisture levels change through the seasons. A contractor who has not worked extensively in this area will not automatically know how deep to dig the base or how thick to pour to account for Randolph ground conditions.
The mature trees that line most Randolph residential streets add another layer of complexity. Root systems that have grown for 50 or 60 years can run underneath driveways and walkways, causing the slab to heave from below. Simply pouring new concrete over a problem root zone without addressing the cause produces a surface that fails again within a few years. Road salt used on town roads and Route 128 also accelerates surface deterioration on slabs that were not sealed or were poured with too low a water-to-cement ratio. Getting all of these factors right from the start is what makes a locally experienced contractor worth hiring.
Our crew works throughout Randolph regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. Randolph is a compact town of about 10 square miles, with the traditional neighborhood center near North Main Street and residential streets spreading out from there toward the Canton, Holbrook, and Milton town lines. We have worked on ranches, split-levels, and Cape Cods throughout all parts of town.
The Route 128 and Interstate 93 interchange runs through Randolph, and we are familiar with the logistics of accessing properties on both sides of the highway. Many Randolph homeowners commute into Boston by MBTA commuter rail or by car, which means we are used to working on properties while owners are away. We keep the site clean at the end of each workday and coordinate everything so you do not need to take time off to supervise. Permits are handled through the Town of Randolph before any work begins.
We also serve communities adjacent to Randolph. If your project is in Braintree, MA, our crew covers that area as well. Randolph sits at the center of a cluster of towns we serve regularly, so scheduling and response times are consistent across the area.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form, and we will respond within one business day. We will ask a few basic questions about your project - location, approximate size, and what you are hoping to accomplish - so we can come prepared.
We come to your Randolph property, measure the site, assess the soil and grade conditions, and give you a written estimate that covers materials, labor, and permit fees - no surprises later. You are under no obligation after the estimate.
Once you approve the estimate, we pull the required permit through the Randolph Building Department and schedule your project. Permit processing typically adds one to two weeks before the start date, and we communicate that timeline clearly from the beginning.
We complete the work and clean the site before we leave. For driveways and slabs, we walk you through the curing period - typically five to seven days before vehicle use - and answer any questions about maintenance and sealing.
We serve Randolph homeowners with free on-site estimates, no-pressure quotes, and permits handled through the Randolph Building Department. Call us or submit a request below.
(781) 633-0867Randolph is a town of about 35,000 people in Norfolk County, roughly 12 miles south of Boston. Most of its housing stock consists of single-family ranches, Cape Cods, and split-levels built during the postwar decades, and a high share of residents are owner-occupants who have lived in their homes for years. The town center is anchored by North Main Street, and residential neighborhoods spread outward toward the borders with Canton, Holbrook, and Braintree. According to published reports, Randolph is recognized as one of the most racially and ethnically diverse communities in Massachusetts, with strong Haitian, Cape Verdean, and Vietnamese communities that have made significant investments in local homeownership.
The Turner Free Library on North Main Street and the Route 128 / Interstate 93 interchange are landmarks that most Randolph residents know well. Properties near the highway corridor and the older neighborhoods closer to the town line with Canton share similar soil conditions and housing ages, which is why we can move between both towns efficiently when schedules allow. The town's compact footprint also means most Randolph addresses are within a short drive of our base of operations, keeping our response times consistent.
Get a durable concrete driveway built to last through every season.
Learn MorePrecision concrete floor installation for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreSolid, well-finished concrete steps that boost safety and curb appeal.
Learn MoreExpert foundation installation to support your structure for decades.
Learn MoreDurable parking lots designed for heavy vehicle loads and long use.
Learn MoreCall today or submit a request online. We respond within one business day and provide written estimates with no pressure to commit.