Concrete contractor Johnny Valadez Concrete serves College Area and greater San Diego from a base on Winona Avenue between Madison and Monroe, running flatwork, foundation, and decorative concrete projects across the county. Owner Johnny P. Valadez founded the sole proprietorship in 2019 and holds a BBB A+ profile for residential and commercial concrete services. The crew specializes in poured-in-place flatwork including driveways, sidewalks, and patios, along with colored concrete using integral pigment systems and stamped concrete patterns that replicate flagstone, slate, and brick textures. Hardscape grading for new patio and walkway pours frequently coordinates with Nature's Elements Landscaping on the Grantville side of Mission Gorge Road, where the landscape crew preps the softscape borders while the concrete crew forms and pours. Foundation services cover both new-pour stem walls for room additions and ADU builds and repair work on the post-tension and conventional slab foundations common in the 92115 ZIP's 1960s-era housing stock. Driveway replacements in College Area often require sawcut demolition of existing slabs, rebar grid placement on chairs, and 3,500-PSI concrete pours finished with broom texture for vehicle traction, and the Valadez crew handles every phase from demo through final cure. Stamped and colored concrete patio installations near SDSU draw from a client base that includes rental property owners adding outdoor living space to attract tenants in the competitive campus-adjacent market along El Cajon Boulevard. Sidewalk repair and ADA-compliant ramp pours round out the scope, addressing the trip hazard and code compliance issues that the Development Services Department flags during property transfers. Larger remodeling projects that require new concrete work run through general contractors in the area, and Infinity Remodeling Service in College Area is one of the renovation firms whose slab and flatwork phases the Valadez crew executes on full-home timelines. The Winona Avenue shop sits in the residential grid south of El Cajon Boulevard, keeping the concrete trucks within a short staging radius of job sites across College Area, Rolando, and the surrounding neighborhoods.