
Premier Biloxi Concrete is a concrete contractor serving Long Beach, MS with driveways, patios, and foundations designed for the Harrison County coast. We understand the post-Katrina housing stock, sandy coastal soils, and drainage demands that come with living near the Gulf. Every new inquiry gets a reply within one business day.
Long Beach driveways take a beating from the heavy rain the Gulf Coast receives, and older asphalt or improperly poured concrete cracks and sinks as the sandy soil below shifts with moisture. We build driveways with adequate base depth and drainage slopes so water moves away from your foundation even after the biggest storms. See our driveway services.
Many Long Beach homes rebuilt after Hurricane Katrina used raised slab foundations to meet updated FEMA flood zone requirements, and additions or detached structures often need new slabs poured to the same standards. We pour slabs with the reinforcement and vapor barriers needed for Harrison County's high-rainfall, coastal soil conditions.
Long Beach homeowners use their outdoor spaces year-round, and a well-built concrete patio holds up to the heat, humidity, and salt air that would degrade cheaper materials within a few seasons. We finish patios with sealers suited for Gulf Coast conditions, which keeps the surface from absorbing moisture and developing mold or surface breakdown.
The residential neighborhoods off Highway 90 in Long Beach have sidewalks that have heaved and cracked over the years as tree roots and moisture-saturated soil shifted beneath them. We replace and rebuild sidewalks with proper control joint placement to minimize future movement and keep the surface safe and level.
Yards near the Long Beach Harbor and in lower-lying neighborhoods lose soil to erosion after heavy storms, especially where the grade changes between the street and the house. A properly built concrete retaining wall holds the grade in place, protects landscaping, and keeps storm runoff from undercutting your foundation.
Attached garages in Long Beach deal with high humidity year-round, and a garage floor that was not poured with a proper vapor barrier will absorb moisture from below, leading to surface dusting, staining, and eventual breakdown. We pour garage floors to the thickness and finish needed to stay solid in this coastal climate.
Long Beach sits directly on the Gulf of Mexico between Gulfport and Pass Christian, and the coastal setting creates conditions that challenge concrete in ways that do not apply farther inland. The city receives about 65 inches of rain per year, and much of the soil near the beach is sandy and less stable than the clay-mixed soil found in more inland parts of Harrison County. When concrete is poured without adequate base preparation on these soils, it settles unevenly and cracks faster than expected. Homes in FEMA flood zones - which cover a meaningful share of Long Beach's coastal neighborhoods - carry additional requirements for how driveways and slabs must be graded to prevent trapping floodwater against structures.
Hurricane Katrina reshaped the city's housing stock in 2005, and a large portion of the homes standing today were either rebuilt from scratch or heavily repaired after the storm. That means many Long Beach homes are now 15 to 20 years old and reaching the point where original driveways, patios, and slabs need real attention. Post-Katrina construction was sometimes done quickly, and not all of it was built to last another 25 years without maintenance. Salt air from the Gulf also accelerates surface wear on any concrete that is not properly sealed. A contractor who does not know this area may not account for these factors, and the work will show it within a few years.
Our crew works throughout Long Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. The city splits naturally between the neighborhoods closest to the beach along Highway 90 and the quieter residential streets farther north. Near the water, we encounter elevated homes on piers and raised slabs that require different approaches than the slab-on-grade ranch homes that are common a mile or two inland. Permit requirements for work in the coastal areas of Long Beach are reviewed with reference to FEMA flood maps, which we check before scoping any project near the water.
Long Beach Harbor is one of the city's most recognizable spots, and we have worked on homes in the neighborhoods surrounding it. The city runs along Highway 90, which is the main road connecting it to Gulfport on the east and Pass Christian on the west, and we know the neighborhood patterns on both sides of the highway. The Long Beach School District is a strong sign of the stable, rooted character of this community - most homeowners here are long-term residents who take their properties seriously.
We serve the full stretch of the western Harrison County coast. Neighbors in Pass Christian, just west along Highway 90, are served by the same crew with the same knowledge of coastal soil and drainage requirements. We also work regularly in Gulfport, the larger city just east, where commercial and residential concrete demand stays high year-round.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and describe what you need. We reply to every inquiry within one business day and will schedule a convenient time to see the site.
We visit the property, evaluate soil conditions, drainage, and any flood zone considerations, and provide a written estimate. There is no obligation, and we will tell you upfront if a permit is required for your project in Long Beach.
If your project requires a permit, we handle that with the City of Long Beach before any work begins. Once permits are in hand, we schedule the job and show up on the agreed date with the crew and equipment needed to complete it.
We complete the pour, apply the appropriate finish and sealer for Gulf Coast conditions, and clean up the site. Most residential driveways and patios are safe for foot traffic within 48 hours and ready for vehicles within seven days.
We serve Long Beach and the surrounding Harrison County coast. Get a written estimate with no obligation - reply within one business day.
(228) 250-0610Long Beach is a small coastal city of about 14,000 people in Harrison County, positioned directly on the Gulf of Mexico between Gulfport to the east and Pass Christian to the west. U.S. Highway 90 runs along the waterfront and serves as the city's main artery, connecting it to the rest of the Gulf Coast. The city has its own school district and a stable, year-round residential population - unlike some Gulf Coast communities that rely heavily on seasonal tourism, Long Beach is a real hometown where families put down roots. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the majority of Long Beach homes are owner-occupied, which means residents here are invested in keeping their properties maintained over the long term.
Hurricane Katrina reshaped Long Beach's neighborhoods in 2005, and a large portion of the homes standing today were built or substantially rebuilt after the storm. The areas closest to the beach have elevated homes on piers designed to meet current FEMA flood zone requirements, while the neighborhoods farther north along and beyond the highway tend to be older ranch-style homes on concrete slabs from the 1970s through the 1990s. Long Beach Harbor is a well-known local landmark, and the city's waterfront character defines daily life for residents on both sides of the highway. Neighbors to the west in Pass Christian deal with similar coastal conditions and are part of the same corridor we serve regularly.
Custom outdoor patios built for comfort and lasting curb appeal.
Learn MoreSturdy retaining walls that control erosion and shape your landscape.
Learn MoreCommercial parking lots built for high traffic and long service life.
Learn MoreCall Premier Biloxi Concrete today for a free estimate on your Long Beach concrete project - we reply within one business day and pull all required permits before work starts.