Concrete Bases in Culcheth
A shed or garden room is only as good as the base under it. We dig out, shutter, pour and level concrete bases built to your supplier’s exact spec. Around five miles from our Leigh base.
Concrete Bases for Culcheth Gardens
With good-sized gardens and plenty of home-working commuters, Culcheth is prime territory for garden rooms and offices, and every one needs a level, correctly specified concrete base before it arrives. We dig out, shutter, pour and finish bases matched exactly to the supplier’s spec.
We cover Culcheth and the surrounding area: Twiss Green, Wigshaw, Fowley Common, Newchurch, Glazebury and beyond (WA3).
Get a Free Culcheth Quote
What’s Included
The same goes for sheds, greenhouses, workshops and hot tubs. Access on Culcheth drives is usually decent, which helps with concrete deliveries, and where it isn’t, we plan the pour around it rather than making it your problem.
- Shed bases, garden room bases, offices and summerhouses
- Reinforced garage bases and hot tub bases
- Built to your supplier’s exact base specification
- Full dig-out with soil and waste carted away
- Compacted hardcore sub-base under every pour
- Shuttered, tamped and laser-levelled
How It Works
Concrete Bases in Culcheth, FAQs
Yes, garden room bases are regular work for us here. We build to the manufacturer’s footprint, thickness and level tolerance, so when the building arrives it lands exactly as designed.
The base itself doesn’t. The building on top usually falls under permitted development, but that depends on its size, height and position. For anything large or close to a boundary it’s worth checking with Warrington Borough Council before ordering.
For most sheds and garden rooms, around 100mm of concrete over a compacted hardcore sub-base is the standard. A garage base, hot tub base or heavier structure usually needs 150mm with reinforcement mesh. If your building comes with a supplier spec, we build to that. It overrides any rule of thumb.
Yes, that’s exactly how we prefer to work. Most garden room and shed companies issue a base drawing with dimensions, thickness and tolerance. Send it over with your enquiry and we’ll quote against it, so the installers have nothing to complain about when they arrive.
You can walk on fresh concrete after a day or two, but most suppliers want the base cured for around five to seven days before a building goes up, and concrete keeps gaining strength for weeks after that. We’ll give you a straight answer on timing when we pour, based on the weather and the load going on top.