Spokane Valley Concrete & Masonry is a masonry contractor serving Mead, WA with retaining wall construction, foundation repair, and concrete restoration for the ranch-style and split-level homes on larger lots in north Spokane County. We have served the Inland Northwest since 2016 and respond to all Mead inquiries within one business day.

Mead properties often sit on quarter-acre to half-acre lots with mature trees and grade changes that push soil toward driveways or neighboring properties after years of freeze-thaw movement. Our retaining wall construction service includes proper drainage installation behind every wall - essential in north Spokane County where slow-draining clay soil and basalt rock can trap water against masonry through the freeze-thaw season.
Most homes in Mead were built from the 1970s through the early 2000s, and ranch and split-level designs with crawl spaces are especially common. When spring snowmelt saturates the ground around these crawl space foundations, cracks in aging concrete and block walls let moisture reach the interior - a problem that gets worse each season without repair.
Long driveways on Mead's larger lots bear the full impact of freeze-thaw heaving every winter, and the basalt rock layer under much of north Spokane County means concrete can shift and crack in ways that are hard to predict from the surface. Properly installed pavers on a compacted frost-rated base flex with seasonal ground movement rather than cracking through it.
Mead properties with detached garages, storage sheds, and outbuildings often need block walls for enclosures, utility screens, or low retaining applications. Block walls in north Spokane County require footings rated for the local frost depth - homes that used short footings when built are now showing frost-heave cracking at the base courses.
Original concrete walkways on Mead's 1970s and 1980s homes are now 40 to 50 years old and often heaved, cracked, or settled unevenly from decades of freeze- thaw cycling. A masonry walkway on a properly compacted base handles north Spokane County winters without the repeated heaving that makes older slabs a trip hazard by spring.
Older Mead homes with brick chimneys and masonry veneer built in the 1970s and 1980s have mortar joints that have endured four or five decades of Spokane-area winters. When those joints erode, water enters and accelerates structural damage each freeze-thaw cycle. Tuckpointing restores the joint without the cost of a full masonry rebuild.
Mead is an unincorporated community in Spokane County sitting about 10 miles north of downtown Spokane, and most of its housing was built between the 1970s and the early 2000s. Ranch-style and split-level homes on quarter-acre to half-acre lots are the norm here. That combination - homes 25 to 50 years old on larger lots with mature trees - creates a specific set of masonry maintenance needs. Freeze-thaw cycles have been working on these properties for decades, and the basalt bedrock layer under much of north Spokane County adds drainage complexity that does not exist in other parts of the region.
When the Spokane area gets 40 to 50 inches of snow and temperatures drop well below freezing from November through February, every concrete surface and masonry joint on an older Mead home goes through hundreds of freeze-thaw cycles over the course of a winter. Driveways crack and heave. Retaining walls shift. Foundation walls develop new cracks each spring. Crawl space moisture increases as ground-level drainage degrades. These are not surprises - they are predictable maintenance items on Mead properties that a contractor familiar with north Spokane County recognizes and can address before they become costly structural problems.
Our crew works throughout Mead regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect masonry contractor work here. Because Mead is an unincorporated community, permits for structural masonry projects go through Spokane County rather than a city building department, which has its own timeline and inspection process. We handle that coordination on permitted projects and keep your job on schedule.
Division Street and Highway 2 are the main corridors connecting Mead to Spokane, and we work in the neighborhoods that branch off them - from the older subdivisions closer to the Mead School District to the larger-lot properties farther north toward Mount Spokane State Park. When we dig footings in Mead, we come prepared to hit basalt rock, because that is what north Spokane County soil does. We do not stop and add a surprise charge - we plan for it upfront.
We serve homeowners across north Spokane County and the surrounding area. Our work in Airway Heights to the southwest and Spokane to the south means we stay familiar with the range of property types, soil conditions, and permit processes across the full region.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form on this site. We respond to every Mead inquiry within one business day and schedule your on-site visit around your availability.
We visit your Mead property, assess the masonry, and walk you through what we see in plain language. The written estimate is free, no obligation - and we tell you honestly what needs immediate attention versus what can wait another season.
We schedule around Mead's weather - no mortar or concrete work happens when overnight temperatures are dropping below freezing. Your crew shows up on the agreed date and communicates before changing anything about the scope or cost.
When the job is complete, we walk through the finished work with you and answer questions. If anything does not meet your expectations, we fix it before we leave the property.
We serve north Spokane County including Mead and surrounding areas. Free on-site estimates with no obligation - we respond within one business day.
(509) 508-5560Mead is an unincorporated community in Spokane County, Washington, about 10 miles north of downtown Spokane along the Division Street and Highway 2 corridor. It is best known as the home of the Mead School District, one of the larger school districts in eastern Washington - the district and its schools are the main institutional anchor for the community. Most of Mead is residential, made up of single-family homes on larger lots than you would find closer to the city, with a suburban and semi-rural character that attracts families looking for more space without a long commute. The housing stock runs from 1970s ranch-style and split- level homes near the older neighborhoods to newer builds farther out toward open land.
The land north of Spokane sits on basalt bedrock left behind by ancient lava flows, and digging for footings or foundations in Mead often means hitting rock sooner than expected - a well-known characteristic in this part of Spokane County. Properties near Mount Spokane State Park to the east tend to be larger and more rural. Homeowners across the Mead area share the same freeze-thaw maintenance challenges as the rest of north Spokane County. For masonry needs, Mead sits between the contractors serving Millwood to the southeast and Spokane Valley.
Restore your foundation's strength and protect your home's structural integrity.
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Learn MoreCall us or fill out the form and we will respond within one business day with a no-obligation written estimate for your Mead property.