
Bedrock Fort Wayne Concrete & Masonry serves Leo-Cedarville with stone masonry, tuckpointing, and foundation repair - an independent northeast Allen County town with clay soils, riverside properties, and homes that need a contractor who knows this area. Free estimates with replies within one business day.

Larger lots and rural properties in Leo-Cedarville are well-suited to natural and manufactured stone for retaining walls, steps, and exterior accents. Our stone masonry work is built to handle the freeze-thaw cycles that hit northeast Indiana every winter, with proper mortar selection and drainage detail so the installation stays sound for decades.
Leo-Cedarville homes built in the 1970s through 1990s used standard clay brick that holds up well, but the mortar joints between them begin to soften and erode after 30 to 40 years in a northern Indiana climate. Repointing before joints fully open keeps water out of the wall cavity and protects the underlying structure from moisture damage.
Properties near the St. Joseph River and Cedarville Reservoir sit on lower ground that can lose grade after wet seasons. A masonry retaining wall holds the slope in place and manages drainage so that eroded soil does not pile against the foundation or flood lower areas of the yard.
Leo-Cedarville sits on clay glacial soils that expand when wet and contract in dry periods, putting seasonal pressure on older block and poured foundations. Stair-step cracking along mortar joints and horizontal cracking near mid-wall are signs that the foundation needs attention before movement becomes structural.
Rural and semi-rural homes in the Leo-Cedarville area commonly rely on wood-burning fireplaces, and chimneys that face open sky on larger lots see more wind and weather than those on densely built streets. Mortar joints around the chimney crown and cap are usually the first to fail after a few hard winters.
Larger lots in Leo-Cedarville mean longer driveways and more paved surface area than in the city. The freeze-thaw cycle in northeast Indiana works surface cracks into concrete slabs every spring, and addressing cracking early - before the base washes out - is far less expensive than full replacement.
Leo-Cedarville was formed in 1996 when the neighboring villages of Leo and Cedarville merged, and the community includes a range of housing eras - from mid-century homes to ranch-style builds from the 1980s and newer construction from the 1990s onward. Because the town is classified entirely as rural, lots tend to run larger than in the Fort Wayne suburbs, which means more concrete and masonry surface area per property. Larger driveways, stone landscaping features, and outdoor steps all face the same hard winters that hit northeast Indiana every year, and the damage shows up each spring once the ground thaws.
The St. Joseph River and Cedarville Reservoir run through town, and properties near these water features sit on lower ground with heavier clay soil that drains slowly. Clay soil moves with the seasons - expanding when saturated in spring and contracting in dry summers - which puts steady, cyclical pressure on foundations, concrete slabs, and anything set in the ground. A masonry contractor who has not worked in these specific soil conditions may not account for that seasonal movement when sizing a footing or specifying a mortar mix, which can lead to premature failure even on new work.
Our crew works throughout Leo-Cedarville regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect masonry work here. Leo-Cedarville operates its own town government with a stormwater board and building office, and we work with that office directly when a project requires a permit - you can find the town hall on Pony Express Run or reach the town at leocedarville.com. Navigating a local permit process through a town hall this size is straightforward when you know the staff and process - and we do.
State Road 1 (Lima Road) is the main north-south artery connecting Leo-Cedarville to Fort Wayne, and properties throughout town are accessible on a mix of paved streets and rural county roads. Whether your home is near Leo Junior-Senior High School or out toward the reservoir, we cover the full area. We also serve Huntertown to the west and communities throughout this part of Allen County, so this is a regular part of our schedule.
Reach us by phone or the estimate form on this page. We reply within one business day and can typically schedule a visit to your Leo-Cedarville property within the same week.
We assess the masonry in person, which is the only reliable way to scope stone or brick work. You receive a written estimate itemizing labor and materials - no pressure, and no cost for the estimate.
We schedule the work, arrive with the crew and materials, and complete the job as quoted. Most jobs in Leo-Cedarville are done in one to three days; you do not need to be home during the work unless you prefer to be.
We clean the work area when the job is done and walk through the completed work with you. If anything needs adjustment, we handle it before we leave.
We serve Leo-Cedarville and the surrounding northeast Allen County area. Free estimates with no obligation, and replies within one business day.
(260) 279-4710Leo-Cedarville formed in 1996 through the merger of the neighboring villages of Leo and Cedarville, partly to prevent annexation by Fort Wayne. The town sits in the northeast corner of Allen County, covers just under four square miles, and has around 3,600 residents. It is classified entirely as rural, which gives it a character that is distinct from the suburban communities closer to Fort Wayne - larger lots, lower density, and a strong local identity centered on the Leo school system and on the St. Joseph River that runs through town. More information on the community is available through the Leo-Cedarville Wikipedia article.
Most of the housing stock in Leo-Cedarville is single-family residential, with a mix of ranch homes and two-stories built primarily from the 1970s through the 2000s. The Cedarville Reservoir and the St. Joseph River corridor create lower-lying areas with slower-draining soils, while properties on the higher ground further from the water drain more reliably. East Allen County Schools and Leo Junior-Senior High School are central community institutions. Neighboring areas we also serve include Grabill to the east and Huntertown to the west.
Restore your foundation's stability and protect your home from further damage.
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Learn MoreWe work throughout Leo-Cedarville and the northeast Allen County area. Call today or submit a request and hear back within one business day.