
Rexburg Concrete Company serves St. Anthony, ID with concrete driveways, stamped concrete, footings, and flatwork designed to hold up at 4,970 feet on the Snake River Plain. We reply within one business day and provide free written estimates before any work begins.

St. Anthony homeowners use stamped concrete to upgrade patios, walkways, and entry areas that have taken years of weather damage. Our stamped concrete services combine durability with custom patterns that hold up through Fremont County freeze-thaw cycles without the maintenance that natural stone requires.
Many driveways in St. Anthony were poured decades ago and have reached the end of their service life - cracked panels, settled sections, and trip hazards are common on properties built in the mid-20th century agricultural boom. A new concrete driveway designed for the local frost depth will hold its surface and stay level for years.
St. Anthony sits at nearly 5,000 feet where the ground freezes deep each winter, and footings that do not reach below the local frost line will heave and shift with every freeze cycle. We size footings to match Fremont County conditions so new additions, sheds, and outbuildings stay level and stable.
Sidewalks on older St. Anthony lots have been through decades of freeze-thaw cycles on volcanic silt-loam soils, and lifted or cracked panels are a safety issue. Properly jointed replacement slabs installed on a prepared base eliminate uneven surfaces and last far longer than original-era flatwork.
With the warm dry summers and clear skies at this elevation, a well-built patio is one of the most useful additions to a St. Anthony home. Concrete holds up through the short but cold winters without the shifting and rot that affect wood decking in this climate.
Front-entry steps on St. Anthony homes commonly crack, chip, and tilt from years of frost heave and de-icer use. Crumbling steps are a tripping hazard and a poor first impression - replacing them with properly footed concrete steps solves both problems at once.
St. Anthony sits at just under 5,000 feet in elevation on the upper Snake River Plain, and the winters here are serious. Average January lows drop well below 20 degrees Fahrenheit, and the ground freezes solid to a depth of several feet each year. That repeated freeze-thaw cycling is the most damaging force concrete flatwork faces in this valley. Water enters small surface cracks or moves through porous concrete, expands by roughly 9 percent when it freezes, and forces those cracks wider with each cycle. By spring, slabs that looked fine in October show new fractures and lifted panels - especially if the original concrete was poured without adequate thickness, control joints, or sub-base preparation. The volcanic soils common to this part of the Snake River Plain also shift as they absorb and release moisture through the irrigation and snowmelt seasons, which adds lateral stress to slabs and footings.
The housing stock in St. Anthony reflects its agricultural history. A significant portion of homes were built in the mid-20th century to house families working in or around the potato industry in Fremont County. That era of construction used building standards that are now more than 50 years old - and the concrete flatwork from that period is past its typical service life. Homes here are predominantly owner-occupied, and residents tend to invest in repairs that last rather than quick patches. That matches how we work: we assess the underlying cause first, build to the right spec for the local climate, and document everything so the homeowner knows exactly what they are getting.
Our crew works throughout St. Anthony regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. St. Anthony is the county seat of Fremont County, and the properties we work on range from compact in-town lots near Main Street to larger rural parcels on the edges of town that blend into the farmland surrounding the community.
The town sits along US-20, the main corridor connecting Rexburg and Idaho Falls to the west with Ashton and Yellowstone country to the north. The Henry's Fork of the Snake River runs through the area, and in spring the snowmelt from the surrounding mountains raises the river and saturates low-lying ground - something homeowners near that drainage need to account for when planning concrete work near their foundations. The St. Anthony Sand Dunes just west of town are a local landmark that also means wind-driven sand accumulates around properties in that area, working into gaps around foundations and concrete joints.
We serve St. Anthony and the surrounding communities. If you are in Ashton or in Rexburg, we cover those areas with the same crew and the same process.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. You do not need a detailed plan ready - just describe what you are seeing on your property.
We come to your St. Anthony property, look at the soil conditions, existing concrete, and scope of work, and give you a written estimate at no cost. That estimate covers everything - no surprise line items after we start.
Once you approve the estimate, we schedule around Fremont County weather windows. We handle forming, reinforcement, pouring, and finishing - you do not need to be present for the full day, but we will walk you through what we did when we wrap up.
Before we leave, we walk through the finished work with you and explain the curing timeline - important at this elevation where temperatures can shift quickly. Any questions that come up after we leave, call us directly.
We serve St. Anthony and all of Fremont County. Free written estimate, no obligation.
(208) 356-7637St. Anthony is the county seat of Fremont County, Idaho, with a population of roughly 3,400 people. The town sits along the Henry's Fork of the Snake River at just under 5,000 feet elevation, making it one of the higher-elevation small cities in eastern Idaho. The housing stock is predominantly single-family homes built between the 1940s and 1970s on modest lots - a mix of wood-frame ranch homes and older two-story properties that reflect the agricultural economy that built the town. Concrete flatwork from that era is now at or past its expected service life, and requests for driveway replacement and foundation repairs are common across the older parts of town. Learn more about St. Anthony at the St. Anthony, Idaho Wikipedia article.
The community is close-knit and strongly owner-occupied - most residents have lived here for years, and taking care of your property is a community norm rather than an exception. The town is also a gateway to Mesa Falls and the greater Yellowstone region, and some homeowners run short-term rentals or seasonal properties that need periodic catch-up maintenance. Neighboring communities we also serve include Ashton to the north and Rigby to the south - both within easy reach and served by the same crew.
Get a durable, professionally poured driveway built to last through Idaho winters.
Learn MoreTransform your backyard with a smooth, long-lasting concrete patio.
Learn MoreAdd curb appeal and texture with decorative stamped concrete patterns.
Learn MoreProfessionally installed interior and exterior concrete floors built to last.
Learn MoreSafe, solid concrete steps crafted for entryways and outdoor spaces.
Learn MoreProperly graded and reinforced slabs that support your structure for decades.
Learn MoreExpert foundation installation giving your building a solid, stable base.
Learn MoreHeavy-duty concrete parking lots designed for high traffic and longevity.
Learn MorePrecisely poured footings that keep fences, decks, and walls firmly grounded.
Learn MoreClean, precise concrete cutting for repairs, expansions, and utility access.
Learn MoreOur crew works throughout St. Anthony and Fremont County. Call now or submit a request - we reply within one business day.