Park City Focus
Summit works only in Park City and Summit County. That means scheduling for Deer Valley jobs isn't competing with pours in Orem or Lehi — the week is built around Summit County sites.
Service Areas / Deer Valley
Footings, foundations, driveways, and architect-driven flatwork for Deer Valley's ski-in/ski-out custom builds — Empire Pass, Silver Lake, Stein Eriksen, and the full Deer Valley Resort footprint.
Request an EstimateThe Deer Valley Build
Deer Valley builds are rarely simple. Lots run steep, access can be limited by ski trails or HOA rules, architects specify exposed or board-form finishes that leave nowhere to hide a sloppy pour, and the construction calendar gets squeezed between ski seasons. The concrete sub who works these jobs needs to be a partner, not a transaction.
Summit Concrete has the full scope for Deer Valley custom homes: structural footings and stem walls designed to Summit County's 36-inch frost depth, poured walls and grade beams for walkout basements on sloped lots, board-form and exposed-aggregate finishes for architect-driven exteriors, stamped patios and pool decks rated for Park City winters, and driveways engineered for plow traffic and de-icer exposure.
Founder Jurgen Becker's Utah contractor record stretches back to August 11, 1998 — a Utah contractor career now applied exclusively to Park City and Summit County work. Summit operates owner-led — Jurgen is on every Deer Valley site from estimate through walkthrough, so the GC talks to the person making decisions, not a dispatcher.
Why Builders Choose Summit in Deer Valley
Summit works only in Park City and Summit County. That means scheduling for Deer Valley jobs isn't competing with pours in Orem or Lehi — the week is built around Summit County sites.
Pouring at 7,000–9,000 feet is different. Air-entrained mixes, longer set times, and cold-weather protocols are how we approach Deer Valley work — designed for a -7°F winter design temperature and Summit County's Severe weathering classification.
Board-form, exposed-aggregate, integrally colored, and stamped finishes are in our scope. When the architect asks for a mock-up, we pour a sample and match it before the truck shows up.
Deer Valley FAQ
Yes. Empire Pass, Silver Lake, and Stein Eriksen builds often have limited or seasonal access. We plan pour logistics with the GC up front — pump reach, truck staging, and HOA rules on construction hours — so the pour day runs on schedule.
Yes. Winter pours in Deer Valley are part of our normal scope. We use ground heaters, insulated blankets, and cold-weather mixes to meet cure requirements, and we plan around ski-season access restrictions and HOA noise windows.
Yes, in coordination with the radiant-loop installer. We pour over properly prepped and pressure-tested loops, with the reinforcement and joint placement that protects the system.
Yes. Utah DOPL license classes B100, E100, and S220. Founder Jurgen Becker's Utah contractor license record dates to August 11, 1998.
Send us the scope — architect specs, plans, timeline — and we'll come back with a clear written estimate and a schedule slot.