
Arden-Arcade Concrete & Masonry serves Roseville with fireplace installation, retaining wall construction, and concrete flatwork repair - and our crew understands what Placer County clay soils and the city's 1990s-to-2010s tract neighborhoods demand from masonry that has to stand up over time. We have been serving the greater Sacramento region since 2019.

Roseville winters drop into the 30s and 40s on many nights from November through February, which means a fireplace here gets real use - not just a decorative role. The Sacramento Metropolitan Air Quality Management District restricts wood-burning on Spare the Air days, so many Roseville homeowners opt for gas fireplaces that can be used any night of the year. Our fireplace installation work covers both prefabricated gas units and full custom masonry fireplaces built from brick or stone, with permits pulled from the City of Roseville Building and Safety Division on your behalf.
Roseville's hillier eastern neighborhoods and the graded lots in newer west-side subdivisions both create grade changes that require retaining walls with proper drainage and reinforcement. Placer County clay soils swell during wet winters and shrink back each summer, and that seasonal movement is what causes walls without adequate drainage behind them to bow or crack over time. We build retaining walls with the footing depth, compacted base, and drain rock backfill that local soil conditions require.
Homes built on Roseville's expansive clay soils experience seasonal foundation movement that, over 20 to 30 years, produces cracks in slabs and stem walls. Older homes near historic downtown Roseville and the Junction neighborhood sometimes have foundations that predate current seismic code, which adds complexity to repair work. We assess the underlying soil movement before recommending a fix - filling a crack without addressing what is driving it just means the crack comes back.
Homes in Fiddyment Farm, West Park, and Winding Creek had their concrete driveways poured in the early 2000s, and most of that flatwork is now at the age when Roseville clay soil movement makes its presence clear. Paver driveways flex with seasonal soil shifts better than poured concrete, and individual pavers can be reset when settling occurs rather than requiring the homeowner to tear out and repour the entire surface.
Older homes near Roseville's historic downtown and the Railroad District often have original brick chimneys, planters, and accent walls that have weathered decades of Sacramento Valley heat and winter rain. Spalled brick faces, crumbling mortar joints, and sections that have shifted out of plane are all repairable without tearing out the entire structure - and catching them early prevents water from entering the wall cavity where it causes much more expensive damage.
Builder-grade concrete entry walks in Roseville's 1990s and 2000s subdivisions crack and settle as the clay soil underneath them goes through seasonal wet-and-dry cycles. We install replacement paver and concrete walkways with the base compaction and edge restraint that handles Roseville's soil conditions - so the new surface outlasts the original builder installation by a significant margin.
Roseville has grown into Placer County's largest city on the back of a building boom that ran from the late 1980s through the early 2010s. Neighborhoods like Fiddyment Farm, West Park, and Morgan Creek went up quickly and largely at the same time, which means a large share of the city's housing stock is now between 15 and 35 years old - and hitting the maintenance thresholds for roofs, concrete flatwork, mortar joints, and fireplace systems simultaneously. That concentrated aging creates real demand for masonry work, and it also creates risk if the contractor doing the work does not understand what those homes were built on. Much of Roseville sits on expansive Placer County clay soils that swell when winter rains arrive and contract when the long dry summer bakes them out. That push-pull happens every year, and after two decades it shows up as cracked driveways, shifted retaining walls, and foundations that have moved in ways the original builder did not account for.
The climate adds its own pressure. Roseville summers regularly exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit, which dries out mortar joints and brick faster than in most California markets - and cracked, dried mortar is where winter water enters and starts working its way into wall cavities. Roseville gets most of its roughly 20 inches of annual rainfall concentrated between November and March, often in heavy bursts from atmospheric river events that can overwhelm drainage that was designed for average conditions. Masonry with small cracks in October can take in a significant amount of water by December. A contractor who works in Roseville regularly knows this seasonal pattern and specs repairs to get ahead of it. The older homes near historic downtown and the Junction neighborhood have a completely different set of masonry conditions than the newer stucco tract homes on the west side, and treating them the same way is a mistake.
Our crew works throughout Roseville regularly, and building permits for structural masonry - fireplaces, retaining walls, and block walls above certain heights - are pulled from the City of Roseville Building and Safety Division. Fireplaces and masonry additions in Roseville also require coordination with gas utility connections for gas units, and we handle that permitting process from start to finish so homeowners do not need to manage it themselves.
We work across all of Roseville - from the older craftsman and bungalow homes near historic downtown and the Railroad District to the newer stucco tract homes in West Roseville off Blue Oaks Boulevard and the neighborhoods out past Fiddyment Farm. The two parts of the city are genuinely different from a masonry standpoint: downtown-adjacent homes often have brick or stone details that were original to the mid-century construction, while west-side homes tend to need concrete flatwork attention first, then chimney or fireplace work as they age into the 20-to-30-year range.
We also serve the communities neighboring Roseville. If you are in Rocklin, just to the east along Interstate 80, we cover that area regularly - the housing stock and soil conditions there are closely related to what we work with in Roseville. We are also active in Antelope, which sits just south of Roseville along Highway 65 and shares many of the same 1980s-to-1990s housing characteristics.
Reach us by phone at (916) 270-0260 or through the contact form. We respond to all Roseville inquiries within one business day and schedule your on-site visit at a time that works for you - you do not need to take time off to meet us.
We visit the property, assess the soil conditions and existing masonry, and determine which City of Roseville permits apply. You receive a written itemized estimate before any work begins - no vague quotes, no surprises when the invoice arrives.
Our crew arrives on the agreed start date with materials staged. For fireplace installations, we coordinate the gas line connection and City of Roseville inspection at the appropriate stage. For flatwork and retaining walls, we work around your schedule and keep the site clean each day.
When the project is complete, we walk through the finished work with you, explain any curing or break-in requirements - especially for new fireplaces and fresh mortar - and confirm the permit is closed. We are reachable after the project if any questions come up.
We serve all of Roseville - from the older neighborhoods near historic downtown to the newer subdivisions in West Roseville. Call us or send a message and we will get back to you within one business day.
(916) 270-0260Roseville is the largest city in Placer County and one of the fastest-growing in California, with a population that has climbed past 150,000 residents. The city's identity is rooted in its history as a major railroad junction - the historic downtown and the Railroad District still carry that character, with buildings and bungalow homes dating from the early 1900s through the 1950s. The newer west-side neighborhoods - Fiddyment Farm, Winding Creek, and West Park - were built out in the 2000s and early 2010s and represent a completely different housing type: stucco-sided tract homes with tile roofs, two-car garages, and large concrete flatwork areas. Roseville serves as a regional hub for healthcare, retail (including the Westfield Galleria, the largest shopping mall in the Sacramento region), and employment, which keeps the population stable and property values consistently strong.
The city's mix of housing ages - from century-old craftsman homes near downtown to 15-year-old stucco subdivisions in the west - means masonry needs vary significantly by neighborhood. Downtown-adjacent homes often have original brick chimneys and planters that need tuckpointing and brick repair. West Roseville homes are more likely to need flatwork attention first, then fireplace installations and retaining wall construction as they move into mid-life. Roseville is bordered to the east by Rocklin, which shares similar housing stock and soil conditions, and to the south by the Sacramento County communities that include Antelope, where 1980s-to-1990s suburban homes are reaching the age where masonry maintenance becomes a real priority.
Restore structural integrity and protect your property from further damage.
Learn MoreBuild sturdy retaining walls that control erosion and shape your landscape.
Learn MoreRevive aging masonry to its original character and structural soundness.
Learn MoreAdd natural stone beauty to interior or exterior walls with expert installation.
Learn MoreConstruct solid concrete block walls for privacy, security, and durability.
Learn MoreLay strong block foundation walls that support your structure long-term.
Learn MoreDesign and build beautiful outdoor kitchen structures in brick or stone.
Learn MoreBuild freestanding or boundary brick walls with precision craftsmanship.
Learn MoreCall us at (916) 270-0260 or send a message through our contact form. We serve all of Roseville and respond within one business day.