Concrete work for Claude and Armstrong County — driveways, shop slabs, ranch foundations, and residential pours across the canyon-country plains east of Amarillo.
Call (806) XXX-XXXXClaude, Texas sits 28 miles east of central Amarillo on US-287 and is the county seat of Armstrong County. Small town (~1,150 population), county-seat character, and a heavily rural surrounding. The concrete work here skews ag and ranch — long driveways, working ranch infrastructure, shop slabs, occasional oil-and-gas pours in the Panhandle field extension into Armstrong County.
Armstrong County borders Palo Duro Canyon on the west and the canyon-country badlands to the east. Ranching runs the county economy along with some oil-and-gas, tourism from the canyon-adjacent scenic drives, and light retail along US-287.
Some of the most beautiful custom homes in the Amarillo area sit on the east rim of Palo Duro Canyon in Armstrong County. These lots need custom foundation design (often pier-and-beam or over-excavated pad with engineered fill), slope-stability review, custom decorative concrete (stamped patios and pool decks with canyon-view orientation), and longer driveway runs (500+ feet from the FM road to the house).
Working ranches in Armstrong County need concrete that survives 20+ years of livestock, weather, and heavy equipment:
Claude is 28 miles east of central Amarillo on US-287 — a 35-minute drive. Same 40-mile-radius service policy as Bushland, Canyon, Panhandle. Standard lead times. Ready-mix from Amarillo works for Armstrong County pours. Very large pours (>100 cy) sometimes sequenced with Groom or Clarendon plants for logistics.
| Work | Range |
|---|---|
| Long rural driveways | $8–$15/sqft (length-dependent) |
| Ranch shop slab (30×40 6″) | $8,500–$14,000 |
| Cattle chute pad | $2,500–$4,500 typical |
| Custom home foundation | Engineered, quoted from drawings |
US-287 runs east-west through Claude. Palo Duro Canyon east rim sits ~15 miles west. Ranching remains the economic base. Armstrong County Historical Museum in town.
Yes, regularly.
Yes — chute pads, shop slabs, feed pads, water trough foundations.
Yes, per engineering. Usually pier-and-beam.
Yes, within our 40-mile radius from Amarillo.
Yes, per operator safety compliance.