Kirk and Ryan started K&R in 2018. Same team, same standards, same county — just a lot more driveways under our belt now.
Daily, year-round. Respond within one working day.
Eight towns: Winter Park, Fraser, Tabernash, Granby, Grand Lake, Hot Sulphur Springs, Parshall, Kremmling.
K&R started in 2018 with one truck and a simple idea: pour every job like it's going on our own property. That hasn't changed. We've got more trucks now, but the standard is the same.
Kirk learned flatwork the hard way — years of prepping ground, tying rebar, finishing in weather that wanted him to quit. Long enough to know that what separates concrete that lasts from concrete that cracks isn't the bag of mix. It's how you prep, when you pour, and who's running the trowel.
We chose Grand County because it's home. And honestly, because pouring up here keeps you honest. The season is short, the ground is unpredictable, and the weather doesn't care about your schedule. If you cut corners, it shows — not right away, but in a couple winters. We don't cut corners.
We keep the operation small on purpose. One project at a time per crew. Kirk or Ryan on every job. You're not going to get handed off to somebody you've never talked to. When you call, you get one of us. When we show up, we're running the job. And we back the work with a written warranty.
A lot of what we do now is stamped concrete on higher-end mountain homes — slate driveways, custom patios, decorative work for builders and architects building nice properties. That's the work we're proudest of, and it's the kind that rewards the attention a small crew can give.
We're a two-owner concrete company. We pour locally. We like what we do. And we'd rather do one great project than chase ten average ones.
We prep the ground right, tie the rebar right, pour the right mix, and finish it clean. The boring stuff is what makes concrete last — so we don't skip any of it.
Kirk or Ryan is on every project from start to finish. The person who gave you the estimate is the one running the pour. That's how we do it.
We live here. We know the ground, the weather, and the tight pour windows that come with working at altitude. This is our backyard.
Pouring concrete up here isn't the same as pouring on the Front Range. The altitude, the cold, and the short season all matter. Here's what we do about it.
We compact the base, route drainage, and account for the frost line before the truck even shows up.
Higher air content in the mix so it handles the freeze-thaw cycles up here. We adjust for the altitude and the time of year.
We don't pour and leave. We stay on top of the cure based on the weather — because the first few days after the pour are what matter most.
We seal it at hand-off and give you a simple maintenance schedule so it still looks good five winters from now.
Tell us about your project — we'll talk about whether we're the right fit and what a realistic timeline looks like. We'll get back to you within one business day.