Serving Greeley for Over 30 Years
Enright has been pouring concrete in Greeley since 1989. Greeley sits at roughly 4,658 feet on the South Platte plains, the seat of Weld County and one of the fastest-growing parts of the Northern Front Range. The soils here are clay-heavy with pockets of sandy loam, and they shift through the year with the irrigation cycle and the dry-cold winters. Concrete that wasn’t built for that doesn’t make it past a decade.
We’ve worked on driveways in the older neighborhoods around UNC and downtown, commercial lots along 10th Street and Highway 34, and structural flatwork out at Promontory and west toward Windsor. We know what the heavy ag traffic, the freeze-thaw at over 4,600 feet, and the local soils do to a poorly built pour. We also know what good base work and drainage does to extend its life.
When you call us, you get a contractor who’s been on the Front Range since 1989, who builds to City of Greeley standards from the subgrade up, and who pours residential and commercial concrete, ADA-compliant ramps, curb and gutter, and structural flatwork built to handle this ground.
Why Greeley Property Owners Choose Enright
Family Owned, Personally Accountable: Enright is our last name. Every slab we pour in Greeley either builds or hurts that name, and that keeps us honest in a way bigger brand-name shops aren’t.
Since 1989 on the Front Range: Over 30 years pouring concrete on Weld County’s clay-and-loam soils, in the freeze-thaw cycles and dry summers that define life on the South Platte plains. We build accordingly from the subgrade up.
BBB Accredited with an A+ Rating: Honest quotes, no bait and switch, and base prep that doesn’t get skipped to protect a margin. That’s how the rating gets earned over three decades on the Front Range.
Concrete Services in Greeley
Concrete Parking Lots
Greeley’s commercial lots along 10th Street, Highway 34, and out west toward Promontory take a beating from delivery trucks, ag-related freight, and steady customer turnover. Add Weld County’s clay-and-loam soils and heavy seasonal irrigation, and a lot poured without proper design fails years early. We design parking lots to City of Greeley Street Standards, right slab thickness, compacted subgrade, joints placed to control cracking, so the lot holds up to actual use, not theoretical use.
Concrete Driveways
Greeley’s clay-heavy soils shift hard with the irrigation cycle and seasonal moisture changes, and they break poorly built driveways. Properties in the older UNC-area neighborhoods and newer builds out west toward Windsor face the same shrink-swell behavior. We over-excavate where the clay needs it, compact to spec, and reinforce at the apron where most failures show up. The slab stays flat through the freeze-thaw at over 4,600 feet without splitting along the street edge.
Concrete Sidewalks
Cracked, uplifted, or uneven sidewalks across Greeley’s older neighborhoods around UNC and downtown become trip hazards and liability fast. The City’s Street Standards spell out the design requirements for sidewalks in the right-of-way, width, thickness, slope, and tie-in details. We pour to those specs, set drainage correctly, and finish surfaces that meet City inspection and stay safe to walk on for decades.
Curbs & Gutters
Greeley sits between the South Platte and the Cache la Poudre, and runoff management matters here in a way it doesn’t on drier ground. Failed curbs and gutters let water cut under your lot or driveway and undermine the base. We build curb and gutter to City Street Standards, tied into existing storm infrastructure, so runoff gets carried away from your property instead of pooling against the slab edge.
Trash Pads & Equipment Pads
Greeley’s commercial, restaurant, and ag-adjacent properties run dumpster pads hard, heavy bins, frequent compactor pickups, and the occasional ag-equipment drop. A standard pad won’t last. We pour reinforced trash pads and equipment pads at the thickness your actual operation requires, on a properly compacted subbase, with drainage that keeps standing water from pooling against the slab and accelerating its failure.
ADA Ramps
Accessible ramps on Greeley’s commercial properties, from 10th Street to the UNC campus area and Highway 34 corridor, have to meet federal ADA spec. The 1:12 maximum slope, required landings, ramp widths, and detectable warning panels at curb cuts all factor in. We pour ramps and curb ramps to code from the start, so your property stays accessible, your inspection passes, and you don’t end up tearing out work that wasn’t right.


Concrete Permits & Regulations in Greeley, CO
Concrete work in Greeley has to follow City and federal rules, and getting them wrong is expensive. We handle the details so your project passes inspection and stays compliant.
Permits and right-of-way. Replacing an existing slab on the same footprint often doesn’t need a building permit. But new work, added impervious surface, or anything in the public right-of-way (sidewalks, curbs, gutters, driveway aprons) requires a Right-of-Way/Easement Construction Permit from City of Greeley Public Works. All construction or adjustments affecting City infrastructure has to follow the City Street Standards for design and materials. We pull the paperwork through City permits and licenses and build to local standards.
ADA compliance. Public ramps, walkways, and parking spaces have to meet ADA rules for slope, width, landings, and detectable warning panels. Commercial work along 10th Street, Highway 34, and out near the UNC campus all gets held to this standard. We build to it from the start.
Stormwater and grading. Projects that disturb defined areas trigger stormwater requirements, and how drainage gets handled is reviewed before approval. With Greeley’s proximity to the South Platte and the Cache la Poudre, drainage matters here. We design every pour to move water off the slab and off your property line.
We handle permitting as part of our service. We know what Greeley requires, the City Street Standards that govern concrete in the right-of-way, and how to keep your project compliant. You focus on the results; we handle the paperwork.
Ready to Get Started?
Get a free, no-obligation estimate from a Front Range crew that knows this ground. Call us at 720-637-4960 or fill out the form for a free estimate. We’ll come look at your property, tell you straight what your concrete actually needs, and give you a fair price. No bait and switch, no pressure. Whether it’s a driveway, a parking lot, an ADA ramp, or curb and gutter work, we’ll do it right the first time. You can also see examples of our recent past work across the Front Range.

