
H&C Fortuna Foothills Concrete serves Roll, AZ with foundation installation, driveways, patios, and slab work built for rural Yuma County properties - a local concrete contractor that has served the U.S. 95 corridor since 2019 and replies to every inquiry within one business day.

Rural properties in Roll often have outbuildings, workshops, and storage structures that need properly engineered concrete foundations rather than bare ground or gravel pads that shift with the soil. Caliche layers in this part of Yuma County must be broken and compacted before the forms go in - skipping that step is the reason most older foundations in this area have settled. Learn about our approach on the foundation installation page.
Most homes in Roll sit on large lots with long driveways that were originally gravel or bare dirt. A concrete driveway keeps the dust down, handles heavy truck and equipment traffic without ruts, and holds up through the monsoon runoff that crosses flat desert lots. We pour driveways with control joints sized for the extreme heat cycling this area sees between summer highs and winter nights.
Homeowners in Roll adding a garage, shed, or covered RV pad need a reinforced concrete slab that stays level through the season-to-season soil movement common on flat agricultural land. We assess caliche depth and irrigation drainage patterns on the site before forming so the finished slab does not develop settlement cracks within the first few seasons.
Roll residents get real use out of outdoor living spaces from October through May, when the desert climate is pleasant for most of the day. A covered patio slab poured with the right pitch handles monsoon rain without pooling against the house, and a sealed surface resists the fine alkaline dust that blows across open lots in this part of the Yuma County desert.
Block walls, shade structures, and covered carports on Roll properties all need properly sized footings to stay upright through the freeze-thaw nights of winter and the soil expansion that comes with summer monsoon moisture. We dig footings to county-specified depths and reinforce them appropriately so they do not heave or crack under the structure above.
Properties along low-lying areas of Roll deal with soil erosion and grade changes during heavy monsoon rain events, and a concrete retaining wall is the most durable solution for holding a grade or separating a yard from an adjacent field or road. We size retaining walls appropriately for the load they need to hold and the soil behind them so they do not tip or crack with seasonal moisture changes.
Roll is an unincorporated community along U.S. Highway 95, positioned in the middle of one of the most productive agricultural stretches in the Yuma County desert. The land is flat, the soil sits above caliche hardpan, and the surrounding farmland is criss-crossed with irrigation canals that affect drainage on adjacent residential properties. Most homes in Roll were built between the 1970s and 1990s - many on large lots with manufactured home-style construction. Those original concrete pads, driveways, and walkways are reaching the end of their useful life, and replacement work has to account for the specific site conditions in this valley: caliche, flat grades, and nearby agricultural water movement.
Summer temperatures in Roll exceed 110 degrees Fahrenheit regularly from June through August, which means concrete poured without proper curing management in this climate will develop surface cracking and reduced strength within its first few seasons. The monsoon season from July through September brings sudden heavy rain on flat ground with nowhere to drain quickly, and foundations and slabs that were not poured with drainage pitch can develop erosion underneath within a few storms. A contractor who works in Roll regularly understands these site-specific conditions from experience - not from a website description of what desert concrete work is like.
Our crew works throughout Roll regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete contractor work here. Because Roll is an unincorporated community, permits for concrete and foundation work in Roll are handled through Yuma County Development Services, not a city building department. We pull those permits and schedule the required inspections so you do not have to navigate that process yourself.
U.S. Highway 95 is the main road through Roll, connecting the community to Yuma about 30 miles to the south and Quartzsite to the north. Whether your property sits right on Highway 95 or is set back on a farm road, our crew knows this stretch of the valley and the kind of large-lot rural properties typical of the area - long driveways, outbuildings, manufactured homes, and flat open lots that need drainage consideration in every concrete job.
We serve both Roll and nearby Tacna, AZ on a regular basis. Homeowners looking for concrete work in the Dateland area can also find us serving Dateland, AZ.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We will ask a few questions about the project so we can arrive prepared for the site visit.
We walk the site in Roll to check the soil, grade, caliche depth, and drainage before quoting. The written estimate covers all work and materials so you know the full cost before any work starts - no surprise add-ons after the job begins.
We break up caliche, set forms, place reinforcement steel, and schedule the pour for early morning to avoid the midday desert heat. You do not need to be home during the pour, but we will check in with you when we arrive and when we finish.
We manage the curing process to protect the concrete from Roll summers, coordinate the county inspection if a permit is required, and do a final walkthrough with you before we consider the job complete.
We serve Roll and the surrounding Yuma County communities. Send us your project details and we will get back to you within one business day.
(928) 291-0882Roll is a small unincorporated community in western Yuma County, positioned along U.S. Highway 95 between Yuma to the south and Quartzsite to the north. The community sits in the middle of one of Arizona most productive agricultural belts, surrounded by irrigated farmland growing lettuce, cotton, and other crops. Most residents live on large lots - often an acre or more - with properties spread out along the highway and the farm roads branching off it. Housing stock is a mix of manufactured homes and modest site-built ranch-style houses, many built between the 1970s and the 1990s. According to Wikipedia, Roll has a very small population, making it a true rural community where most residents own their land and plan to stay.
For most services and shopping, Roll residents drive south on Highway 95 into Yuma. The community has no commercial center of its own, and contractors that do not regularly travel the U.S. 95 corridor often decline jobs this far out. Nearby communities include Tacna, AZ to the west along Interstate 8, and Wellton, AZ further east, both of which are also part of our regular service area.
Get a durable, professionally built concrete driveway that adds curb appeal.
Learn MoreEnjoy a beautiful outdoor living space with a custom concrete patio.
Learn MoreElevate any surface with decorative stamped concrete patterns and textures.
Learn MoreSafe, smooth concrete sidewalks built to last through every season.
Learn MoreCustom decorative concrete solutions that combine beauty with lasting strength.
Learn MoreSturdy concrete retaining walls that control erosion and define your landscape.
Learn MoreProfessional concrete floor installation for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreSolid concrete steps crafted for safe, lasting entry and exit access.
Learn MoreExpert foundation installation that gives your building a rock-solid base.
Learn MoreLong-lasting concrete parking lots built for high-traffic commercial use.
Learn MoreFoundation raising services that restore level, stable ground beneath your home.
Learn MoreCall today or request a free estimate online - we respond within one business day and come to your Roll property to assess before quoting.