
Frederick Concrete Company brings concrete contractor services to Hagerstown, MD — including slab foundation building, driveway construction, and retaining walls — serving Washington County homeowners with a crew that understands older housing stock, local clay soils, and the Hagerstown permit process.

Hagerstown's older housing stock and active new-construction additions create consistent demand for new concrete slabs. The area's Hagerstown silt loam soil requires careful base preparation to prevent settling, and Washington County requires a permit and pre-pour inspection for any new foundation. We handle the full process — from site prep through the county inspection — for slab foundation building projects across Hagerstown.
A large share of Hagerstown's mid-century ranch homes and split-levels have driveways that are 50 to 70 years old and well past their useful life. Repeated freeze-thaw cycles and clay soil movement accelerate the cracking and settling that makes patching a losing battle. New concrete poured with a proper gravel base lasts for decades in Washington County conditions.
Hagerstown sits in a valley between South Mountain and Fairview Mountain, and many residential properties on the edges of the city have sloped lots that channel water downhill during spring rain events. Concrete retaining walls stop erosion on those slopes and hold their position through the seasonal soil movement that clay-heavy ground produces each year.
Hagerstown's frost depth can reach 18 to 24 inches in a cold winter, which means footings for decks, additions, and outbuildings need to be poured below that depth to avoid seasonal heaving. Undersized or shallow footings are a common problem in older Hagerstown construction that surfaces when a homeowner tries to add a deck or enclosed porch.
Hagerstown homeowners in the newer Robinwood and Halfway corridor subdivisions are increasingly investing in outdoor living spaces that hold up through the valley's weather swings. Concrete patios graded to drain away from the house are a practical choice here, where spring flooding and heavy rain can pool water near foundations on low-lying lots.
Many of Hagerstown's downtown brick row houses and pre-1940 homes sit on fieldstone or rubble foundations that have shifted over the decades. When floors start to sag or doors stick in their frames, settling foundations are often the cause, and addressing the problem before it spreads saves significant structural cost down the road.
Hagerstown averages 25 to 30 inches of snow per year, and the frost depth here can reach 18 to 24 inches in a hard winter. Those conditions matter directly for concrete work: footings poured above the frost line will heave with the soil each spring, and slabs poured without adequate drainage will hold water that freezes, expands, and works cracks through the surface from below. The valley geography that makes Hagerstown what it is also channels cold air and moisture in ways that accelerate concrete deterioration on properties that were not built to account for it.
Hagerstown has a large share of pre-1940 housing — brick row houses downtown near the Maryland Theatre, mid-century ranch homes on the north and west sides, and newer subdivisions spreading out toward Halfway and Robinwood. Each of those eras and property types comes with its own concrete challenges. Downtown homes have tight lot access, mature trees, and older underground infrastructure. Mid-century ranches often have original driveways and patios that have never been replaced. Newer suburbs have clay-heavy fill soils from recent grading that behave differently from undisturbed ground. A contractor who has worked in all three contexts brings something to your project that a first-time Hagerstown crew does not.
We serve Washington County homeowners and understand that permitting for concrete work in Hagerstown runs through two separate offices depending on your address: the City of Hagerstown handles permits for properties inside city limits, while Washington County covers the surrounding unincorporated areas. Submitting to the wrong office delays your project. We confirm jurisdiction before the paperwork goes in.
On the ground, Hagerstown divides into distinct zones. Downtown near Hagerstown City Park and Potomac Street means dense lots, older brick construction, and narrow access for equipment. The neighborhoods stretching toward Robinwood and the Dual Highway corridor have more space, newer homes, and fill soils from recent development that need careful assessment before a foundation pour. We have worked in both environments and adjust our approach accordingly.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Germantown, MD to the south and in Eldersburg, MD — communities where many of the same clay soil and freeze-thaw conditions apply.
We respond to all Hagerstown inquiries within one business day. We will ask a few questions about your project type and location so we can schedule the right kind of site visit — no ballpark numbers over the phone.
We visit your Hagerstown property to assess soil conditions, measure the work area, and check site access. You receive a written itemized estimate covering all phases — there are no vague line items that expand after you sign.
We file the permit application with the correct office — City of Hagerstown or Washington County — depending on your address. Approval typically takes one to two weeks, and we coordinate the required site inspections without you needing to be present.
The crew handles demolition, base prep, the pour, and finishing in sequence. Before leaving, we walk you through the finished work and explain the curing window — including when it is safe to drive on a new slab or place furniture on a new patio.
We serve all of Hagerstown, MD and Washington County, and respond to every inquiry within one business day. Get a written estimate with no pressure and no obligation.
(240) 971-0250Hagerstown is Washington County's largest city, with roughly 43,000 to 44,000 residents and a housing stock that skews older than most Maryland cities. A significant portion of homes were built before 1940, concentrated in the brick row house neighborhoods near downtown and along Potomac Street near the Maryland Theatre. These homes often sit on fieldstone or rubble foundations and have never had major structural updates. Mid-century ranch homes and split-levels fill out the north and west residential areas, and newer subdivision development has expanded toward Halfway and Robinwood along the Dual Highway corridor.
The city sits in the Cumberland Valley between South Mountain to the east and Fairview Mountain to the west, at roughly 550 feet elevation. That valley geography channels weather — cold air in winter, heavy rain in spring — in ways that put real stress on outdoor concrete and older foundations. Major employers like Meritus Medical Center and Washington County Public Schools anchor a stable, long-term homeowner base. Nearby communities including Germantown, MD and Eldersburg, MD share similar concrete service needs driven by the same regional climate and soil conditions.
Custom concrete driveways built to last, with expert grading, forming, and finishing.
View serviceBeautiful, durable concrete patios designed for outdoor living and entertaining.
View serviceDecorative stamped concrete that replicates stone, brick, or tile at a fraction of the cost.
View serviceSafe, code-compliant concrete sidewalks for residential and commercial properties.
View serviceSmooth, durable garage floor concrete pours with proper slope and finishing.
View serviceCustom decorative concrete finishes to elevate driveways, patios, and interior floors.
View serviceStructural concrete retaining walls that control erosion and define your landscape.
View serviceProfessional interior and exterior concrete floor installations with precision leveling.
View serviceSlip-resistant, attractive concrete pool decks built for safety and style.
View serviceSolid concrete steps crafted for curb appeal, safety, and long-term durability.
View serviceMonolithic and raised slab foundations poured to exact engineering specifications.
View serviceFull foundation installations for new construction and additions throughout the region.
View serviceDurable concrete parking lots designed for heavy traffic and low long-term maintenance.
View serviceProperly sized and reinforced concrete footings for decks, additions, and structures.
View serviceFoundation lifting and leveling to correct settling and restore structural integrity.
View servicePrecision concrete cutting for repairs, expansion joints, and utility access.
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Spring books fast across Washington County — reach out now to lock in your project date before the season fills up.