Scheduling Speed
Summit's calendar is a Summit County calendar. That means faster turnarounds on Promontory estimates and flexibility on pour dates when the inspection window opens.
Service Areas / Promontory
Foundations, driveways, patios, and flatwork across Promontory's Ranch Club, Pete Dye Canyon Course, and Jack Nicklaus Painted Valley Course communities.
Request an EstimateThe Promontory Build
Promontory runs 6,300 acres across north Summit County, and between the Ranch Club, the Pete Dye Canyon Course, and the Jack Nicklaus Painted Valley Course, it's one of the most active custom-home communities in Park City. That volume is good news for a focused concrete sub — and it's exactly why Summit exists. When a GC calls for footings on a Promontory build, Summit isn't fitting it between jobs in Utah County. The week is already built around Summit County pours.
Promontory's Design Review Committee keeps standards tight on exterior concrete — board-form walls, exposed aggregate driveways, and integrally colored flatwork are common specs on approved plans. Summit builds to architect and DRC specifications and keeps documentation of mix designs and finishes to support the final approval walk-through. No surprises, no "we'll fix it on the next pour."
Lots in Promontory run large, with grade. That usually means longer driveways, retaining walls, walkout basements, and coordination with landscape and irrigation subs. We handle the full concrete scope and plan pour logistics around the other trades so the GC doesn't have to babysit concrete schedule conflicts.
Why Promontory GCs Call Summit
Summit's calendar is a Summit County calendar. That means faster turnarounds on Promontory estimates and flexibility on pour dates when the inspection window opens.
Board-form, exposed aggregate, and integral-color specs come off architect sheets without a translation layer. We match samples before the pour.
Jurgen Becker is on every Promontory site. GCs talk to the person making decisions, not a dispatcher on the other side of the Wasatch.
Promontory FAQ
Yes. We pour to the architect and Design Review Committee specs from the approved plans, keep documentation of mix designs and finishes, and coordinate sample approval before placement when the spec calls for it.
Yes. Long Promontory driveways with elevation change are a common scope. We engineer thickness, reinforcement, drainage slope, and joint placement for plow traffic, snow load, and grade — and coordinate radiant-heated sections where specified.
Yes, when the GC or homeowner arranges access. Summit works inside the gated Ranch Club and across the Pete Dye Canyon Course and Jack Nicklaus Signature Course sides of Promontory. The GC provides gate credentials and construction-hour coordination; we handle the concrete scope.
Depends on the scope and current schedule. Reach out with plans and a target pour window, and we'll come back with a realistic start date — not an optimistic one we can't hit.
Send plans and a target pour window. We'll review the scope and come back with a detailed estimate and schedule.