
Cerritos Concrete & Masonry handles masonry contractor work throughout Cerritos, CA, from concrete driveway replacement and retaining wall construction to brick repair and masonry restoration. We have been serving Cerritos homeowners since 2018, and we reply to every estimate request within one business day.

Cerritos homes built in the 1960s and 1970s often show mortar erosion, spalling brick faces, and staining from decades of Southern California weather cycles. Our masonry restoration work brings those surfaces back without tearing everything out, which is usually faster and less disruptive than a full replacement.
Most Cerritos driveways were poured when the neighborhoods were first built and have never been replaced. The clay soil here expands and contracts with each wet season, creating cracks and uneven sections that collect water and get worse every year. We replace aging slabs with properly reinforced concrete and cut control joints to reduce future cracking.
Split-level yards in Cerritos need retaining walls that can handle the soil pressure that builds during winter rain. We design drainage into every wall we build so water has a path out rather than building up behind the structure, which is the primary cause of wall failure in this area.
Brick planters, garden walls, and front-entry features on Cerritos homes take the full force of the wet-dry cycle each year, and mortar joints on original 1960s brickwork often crumble well before the bricks themselves fail. Catching this early with targeted repairs prevents the larger reconstruction job that follows when water gets behind the wall.
The mature trees planted when Cerritos neighborhoods were first developed have had 50-plus years to push their roots into front walkways and side paths. We remove damaged sections, address the root intrusion where possible, and pour or pave new walkways built to last alongside the tree canopy that makes these streets attractive.
Original chimneys on Cerritos homes built in the 1960s commonly need crown repair and tuckpointing at the mortar joints that have opened up from decades of seismic micro-movement and thermal cycling. Waiting on chimney repairs usually means larger water infiltration problems inside the home by the time the next rainy season arrives.
Cerritos was developed almost entirely between the early 1960s and the mid-1980s, which means most of the city's homes are now 40 to 60 years old. At that age, the original concrete flatwork, brick features, and masonry walls built with those homes are at or past their expected lifespan. The city's clay-heavy soil compounds the problem. Clay expands when the winter rains arrive and contracts during the long dry summer, and that repeated movement is the primary reason concrete cracks, mortar joints open up, and retaining walls begin to lean in Cerritos neighborhoods.
The mature trees that make Cerritos streets visually appealing add another layer of pressure. Trees planted in the 1960s and 1970s have extensive root systems that push up driveways, crack sidewalk sections, and lift patio slabs. Santa Ana winds that blow through each fall accelerate weathering on exterior surfaces, including stucco, mortar joints, and concrete coatings. A masonry contractor who understands these specific conditions can build and repair in ways that hold up to them, rather than applying a generic fix that fails in the same spot two or three years later.
Our crew has been working in Cerritos since 2018, and the city has been our primary service area throughout that time. We pull permits regularly from the Cerritos Building and Safety Division for structural masonry work, and we know what the department requires for retaining walls, concrete block construction, and foundation work. That familiarity means the permit process does not slow your job down.
We know the neighborhoods throughout Cerritos well. The streets near Studebaker Road and the blocks along 183rd Street are lined with the same ranch-style homes, and the soil conditions and tree canopy issues repeat from property to property. We also work regularly in the Artesia and Norwalk corridors along Cerritos's borders. If your property sits in a HOA community - and many Cerritos homes do - we help navigate material and design approvals before work begins rather than after.
Homeowners in Artesia, CA and the surrounding communities also call us regularly because the same soil and building-age conditions that affect Cerritos extend throughout this part of Los Angeles County. If you are on the Cerritos-Norwalk border or anywhere in between, we serve your area.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and we will respond within one business day. We ask a few basic questions about your project so the field visit is productive from the start.
We visit your property, evaluate the scope of work, and explain what we find in plain terms. At this stage we also identify whether a city permit is required and give you an honest written estimate with no pressure.
Once you approve the estimate and any required permits are in place, we schedule the job. Most residential masonry projects in Cerritos are completed within one to three days, depending on scope.
We walk the finished work with you before we leave so you can ask questions and confirm everything looks right. We clean the site and haul away demo material, leaving your property the way we found it - minus the problem.
We serve Cerritos homeowners with concrete, brick, and stone work. Tell us what you need and we will get back to you within one business day with a free written estimate.
(562) 586-9264Cerritos is a city of about 49,000 residents in Los Angeles County, incorporated in 1956 and developed rapidly through the 1960s and early 1970s on land that had previously been used for dairy farming. The result is a city where most of the housing stock was built within a relatively short window, giving the neighborhoods a consistent character - single-family ranch-style homes on modest lots, many of them still owned by the same families who moved in decades ago. The city is known for its high rate of home ownership and above-average home values relative to the Los Angeles County average. Landmarks like the Cerritos Center for the Performing Arts and the Cerritos Auto Square along Studebaker Road are recognizable anchors in the community.
The city sits at the intersection of the 91, 605, and 5 freeways, which gives it good access to Long Beach, Anaheim, and the broader Los Angeles metro. Neighboring cities include Norwalk to the north, Artesia to the west, and Buena Park to the south. The city's relatively dense, fully developed character means most property improvement work happens within existing residential lots rather than on new construction sites, and the long tenure of homeowners here means maintenance backlogs are common - which is precisely where a local masonry contractor earns their keep.
Restore structural integrity with expert foundation crack and settling repairs.
Learn MoreBuild strong retaining walls that control erosion and shape your landscape.
Learn MoreUpgrade your home's exterior with natural or manufactured stone veneer.
Learn MoreBuild lasting concrete block walls for privacy, security, and structure.
Learn MoreInstall solid block foundation walls built to support your structure for decades.
Learn MoreCreate the perfect outdoor cooking space with custom masonry construction.
Learn MoreDesign beautiful, durable walkways using quality stone, brick, or concrete.
Learn MoreConstruct classic brick walls that add beauty and lasting durability.
Learn MoreOur crew is already working in your neighborhood - call today to lock in a free estimate and get on the schedule before the busy season fills up.