Brentwood is custom-home country — large lots, high build standards, and structural engineers on most plans. We pour the foundations, drives, and storm shelters that carry that quality, working straight off the engineered set.
Brentwood is one of the most active high-end custom-home markets in the region — large lots, big homes, and engineered foundations are the norm. We pour to the structural set, not to a rule of thumb.
Brentwood sits on the southern edge of the Central Basin, on rolling hills underlain by limestone with cherty clay residual soils. The hills mean grading and stepped footers; the clay-over-rock means we pay attention to bearing and drainage, and rock turns up on basements and deep footings often enough to plan for.
The custom-home culture here means structural engineers, soils reports, and high finish expectations. That suits us — we tie rebar to the engineered schedule, set embeds to template for the framers, and pour the in-garage storm shelters that Brentwood families increasingly want. Estate driveways and stamped motor courts round out the work.
The same mix behaves differently on different ground. Here is what we plan for when we pour in Brentwood — and why generic "national average" concrete advice gets people in trouble here.
Brentwood's hills sit on limestone with cherty clay soils above. Bearing is generally good, but the clay and the grade mean we watch drainage and bearing carefully, and rock is common on basements and deep footers.
Rolling lots mean footings step the grade and slabs need real drainage planning. Frost depth runs 12–16"; we set footings below it on competent bearing, not on the loose downhill fill.
Big lots and engineered plans are the Brentwood norm. We build off the structural set, coordinate with the soils report, and set anchor bolts and hold-downs to template.
Brentwood runs its own building and codes department with its own permitting and inspection schedule. We pull permits, schedule footing and slab inspections, and stand for them on site.
Brentwood is foundation-and-driveway heavy, with growing demand for in-garage storm shelters on new custom builds.
Engineered custom-home foundation slabs poured to the structural set, framer-ready on day one.
See the spec → 02 / ServiceStepped, engineered footers on Brentwood's rolling, clay-over-limestone lots.
See the spec → 04 / ServiceFEMA P-361 in-garage storm shelters poured with the foundation on new custom homes.
See the spec → 01 / ServiceEstate approach drives and stamped motor courts for Brentwood's large lots.
See the spec →A sample of the Brentwood subdivisions, roads, and pockets we've worked — not a limit. If you're nearby, we're nearby.
The questions Brentwood builders and homeowners ask us most.
Always, on engineered work — and most Brentwood custom homes are engineered. We tie rebar to the schedule on the stamped set, coordinate with the soils report, and set embeds to template. We don't substitute a rule of thumb for a stamped design.
Yes — in-garage FEMA P-361 safe rooms are an increasingly common add in Brentwood, and the cleanest way to do it is to pour it with the foundation. We can also retrofit one into a finished garage.
Often on basements and deep footers — Brentwood's hills sit on limestone. We probe and quote any rock excavation up front so it's not a mid-dig surprise.
The City of Brentwood runs its own codes department. We pull the permit, schedule the footing and slab inspections on their calendar, and stay on site for them so your schedule holds.