Commercial concrete contractor in Bucks & Montgomery counties.
M&C Contractors is a family-owned commercial concrete contractor based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, serving Bucks County, Montgomery County, and the greater Philadelphia region. Founded in 2004, with 50+ years of combined family experience. ADA-compliant ramps are a specialty.
Commercial-grade concrete, poured to spec.
We pour, finish, and repair concrete for property managers, general contractors, municipalities, and selected residential clients. Most of our work is commercial — flatwork, ramps, slabs, parking lots, sidewalks — though we still take on residential aprons and driveways where they make sense.
Every job is overseen by a principal. No junior estimators, no absent project managers — when you call M&C, you talk to someone who's going to be on your site.
Commercial concrete
- Commercial slabs and pads
- Parking lots, aprons, and curbs
- Sidewalks and walkways
- ADA-compliant ramps
- Loading docks and equipment pads
- Concrete repair and resurfacing
- Code-spec safety pole installations
- Rebar- and wire-reinforced commercial work
Residential concrete
- Driveways and driveway aprons
- Sidewalks and walkways
- Patios and stoops
- Steps
- Foundation pads (sheds, AC units, generators)
- Wheelchair ramps and accessibility upgrades
- Repair and crack remediation
Four areas where we go deep.
Most concrete contractors do everything at the same level. We do, too — but these four are where we've built specific reps, equipment, and process. Each has its own page when you want the detail.
ADA-Compliant Ramps
Code-spec accessibility ramps for commercial, municipal, and HOA properties. Slope, landings, handrail blockouts, and surface texture all to ADA Title III. Our most-requested specialty.
ADA ramp detailDriveways & Aprons
Commercial driveway aprons, residential driveway replacement, and apron-to-curb tie-ins. Concrete or cement, properly graded for drainage.
Driveway detailSidewalks & Curbs
Commercial and municipal sidewalk install, repair, and replacement. ADA-compliant where required. Curb and gutter work tied to road specs.
Sidewalk detailPatios & Flatwork
Residential and commercial patios, finished broom or stamped. Standalone or integrated with masonry walls and steps.
Patio detailWhere we pour.
Primary commercial coverage in Bucks and Montgomery counties. Continued service to established Philadelphia accounts. Township-level service pages publish as content depth allows.
Doylestown · Newtown · Warrington · Horsham · Abington · Hatboro · Lansdale · Plymouth Meeting · King of Prussia · Conshohocken · and more.
Five steps, no surprises.
Honest scope, honest schedule, honest finish. Same process whether you're replacing a 12-foot sidewalk or pouring a new commercial parking lot.
-
01
Site visit & scope
A principal walks the site, measures the work, identifies code or PennDOT considerations, and listens to what your operation actually needs.
-
02
Written quote
Itemized estimate covering scope, materials, PSI spec, finish technique, reinforcement, schedule, and permits. No hidden line items, no junior reps relaying numbers.
-
03
Permits & scheduling
We pull township and county permits, coordinate with PennDOT or right-of-way authorities if applicable, and schedule the pour around your operations — including overnights, weekends, or staged phases when needed.
-
04
Pour & finish
Crew on-site for site prep, form-setting, rebar or mesh placement, pour, screed, finish to spec, and saw-cut joint work. We document the pour for your records.
-
05
Cure & walk-through
We protect the cure and walk the finished work with you. Workmanship warranty in writing, inspection paperwork delivered, and a phone number for any post-job question.
Built to the spec your project actually requires.
- ADA Title III for accessibility ramps, surfaces, and landings — slope, width, and texture per code.
- Commercial-grade PSI mixes — 4000 PSI default for commercial flatwork, higher for traffic and loading applications.
- PennDOT specs where right-of-way, road tie-in, or curb-and-gutter work is involved.
- Reinforcement to spec — rebar, wire mesh, or fiber-reinforced mixes selected for the load.
- Drainage and grade reviewed for water management and frost-heave resistance.
- Township and county permitting handled in-house — we pull the permit, coordinate the inspection.
Selected concrete projects.
Commercial work from across our service area. Full portfolio with case studies on the portfolio page.
ADA-compliant ramp install, municipal facility
Code-spec accessibility ramp with 1:12 slope, top and bottom landings, integrated handrail blockouts, and non-slip surface finish.
View case studyFlatwork repair, retail center
Large-scale apron and walkway replacement at Newtown Shopping Center. Phased across off-hours and weekends; tenants stayed open the entire time.
View case studyLoading-dock pad replacement
8-inch fiber-reinforced commercial slab replacing a failed dock pad. Higher-PSI mix specced for truck-traffic load.
View case studyM&C has poured concrete for Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Oxford Valley Mall, Newtown Shopping Center, and commercial accounts throughout Langhorne, Bensalem, and the surrounding region.
Repeat-client work — municipal facilities, retail centers, medical sites, and homeowner associations — makes up the majority of our calendar.
Reviews sourced from Google, Houzz, and direct customer feedback.
Questions we hear, answered straight.
If yours isn't here, ask — we'll answer it. No estimator runaround.
How thick should a commercial concrete slab be?
It depends on the load. A standard commercial walkway is 4 inches with rebar or wire mesh. A parking lot is typically 6 inches with reinforcement and a higher-PSI mix. Loading docks and heavy-equipment pads run 8 inches or more, often with additional fiber reinforcement. We spec the slab to the actual use, not a one-size default.
How long does concrete take to cure before it can be used?
Foot traffic is typically safe at 24–48 hours. Light vehicle traffic at 7 days. Full design strength is reached at 28 days. We protect new pours during cure and schedule the work to minimize disruption to your operations.
Do you handle permits, or is that on me?
We handle them. We pull township and county permits, coordinate inspections, and provide the documentation your records keeper needs. If your project has unusual permitting (right-of-way, historic district, PennDOT), we'll flag the additional timeline in the quote so there are no surprises.
What makes a ramp ADA-compliant?
ADA Title III requires a maximum slope of 1:12 (one inch of rise per twelve inches of run), level landing pads at the top, bottom, and at each direction change, a minimum clear width of 36 inches between handrails, a non-slip surface, and edge protection where the ramp is elevated. Handrails are required for any ramp with more than 6 inches of rise. We pour ADA ramps for municipalities, retail centers, medical facilities, and HOAs across our service area, and we handle the code review as part of the scope.
Can you match an existing concrete pour?
Closely, yes. Concrete weathers — a new pour will look brighter than weathered adjacent surfaces for the first season. We mix to match aggregate and finish technique, and we use saw-cut joints to integrate the new section visually. Full uniformity comes with time.
Can you work around active business operations?
Yes. Most of our commercial work is scheduled around tenants and customers — overnight pours, weekend phases, or staged sections so the business stays open. We've done flatwork repairs at active shopping centers, medical facilities, and schools without closing them down.
What's the typical lead time for a commercial concrete job?
Two to four weeks from signed quote to pour day is typical, dependent on permits, weather, and your operational schedule. Emergency repairs we move faster. Large multi-phase projects we sequence over weeks or months as your operations allow.
Do you offer a warranty on commercial concrete work?
Yes. Workmanship is warrantied for one year against settling, cracking, or finishing defects under normal use. Concrete is a natural material — hairline shrinkage cracking is expected and not a defect; structural failure is a defect and we'll come back and fix it. Specifics are spelled out in your written contract.
Ready to talk concrete? Talk to a principal.
No call centers, no junior reps. When you call M&C, you talk to someone who'll be on your job site. Quote requests answered within one business day.