
Precision Yuma Masonry & Concrete serves Roll homeowners with masonry restoration, concrete block walls, retaining walls, and foundation repair. We make regular runs up U.S. 95 from Yuma and know what the desert heat and monsoon season do to the stucco and block homes along this corridor.

Stucco and block homes along the U.S. 95 corridor between Yuma and Quartzsite develop mortar joint failures and stucco separation from years of intense sun and monsoon moisture cycling. Our masonry restoration in Roll addresses the cracking and spalling before it becomes a structural problem, using materials rated for sustained desert conditions.
Large rural lots in Roll commonly use concrete block perimeter walls and privacy walls that take a beating from the area's dust storms and monsoon rains. Block construction is the right choice for this climate, but older walls from the 1970s and 1980s often have deteriorated mortar joints that need attention before the next wet season.
The flat desert terrain along U.S. 95 does not drain naturally, and monsoon storms can drop a large share of the annual rainfall in a single afternoon. A masonry retaining wall channels that runoff away from your home's foundation and outbuildings, protecting graded areas from the erosion that fast-moving desert water causes.
Ranch-style homes in Roll built in the 1970s and 1980s have foundations that have experienced decades of the desert's shrink-and-swell soil cycle. Sticking doors, diagonal wall cracks, and uneven floors after a monsoon are all signals worth having assessed before the damage works deeper into the structure.
Properties on several acres in Roll often have unpaved paths between the main house and outbuildings, sheds, or detached carports that become muddy and difficult to navigate after a monsoon storm. A masonry walkway handles that traffic without heaving or washing out the way gravel does after heavy rain.
Long rural driveways in Roll are often compacted gravel or bare desert soil that blows and shifts with the wind. Paver driveways or concrete aprons near carports and garages hold up to vehicle weight without rutting, and they eliminate the dust that gravel driveways kick up in the constant desert breeze.
Roll sits along U.S. Highway 95 in Yuma County, about 30 miles north of Yuma in one of the hottest desert regions in the United States. Summer highs here routinely reach 110 to 115 degrees Fahrenheit, and the sun is intense from May through September. Most homes along this corridor were built between the 1970s and 1990s using concrete block or wood-frame stucco construction - both solid choices for the desert, but both showing wear on properties that have had 40 or 50 years of extreme heat cycling and occasional monsoon moisture working against them. Stucco cracks, mortar joints open, and older block walls start to show the movement that has been building up for decades.
The monsoon season adds a layer of complexity that most people who have not lived in the desert Southwest do not expect. Yuma County gets only about three inches of rain per year on average, but the summer monsoon can deliver a significant share of that in a single storm. When water hits bone-dry desert soil, it does not absorb evenly - it runs fast, pools in low areas, and pushes against the bases of block walls and concrete slabs before draining away. Homes on large lots in Roll often have drainage patterns that have never been assessed, and the slow damage from that water against masonry foundations adds up across years. A contractor who knows this corridor knows where to look.
Our crew makes regular trips up U.S. 95 to serve Roll and the surrounding Yuma County communities - it is a straightforward drive from our base in Yuma, and we know the area well. Structural masonry work in unincorporated Roll is permitted through Yuma County Development Services, and we handle that process on every qualifying job. Arizona also requires all masonry contractors to hold a current license through the Arizona Registrar of Contractors, which you can verify before hiring anyone.
Roll is a small, rural community where most homeowners have been in their places for years and know what the land around them is like. Properties here sit on large parcels - often an acre or more - with detached carports, storage buildings, and in some cases irrigation infrastructure tied to the agricultural land nearby. The open, flat terrain along this stretch of U.S. 95 means dust storms can roll through with little warning and push fine sand into every gap in a masonry exterior. After a bad haboob, it is worth having someone check the caulking, mortar joints, and window seals on your home.
We also serve the communities north and south of Roll along this corridor. If your property is in Tacna to the south or you are looking for coverage further toward Wellton, we cover those areas with the same crew and standards.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. Tell us what you are dealing with - stucco cracks, a failing block wall, drainage issues near the house - and we will schedule a time to come look at it.
We drive out to your Roll property, walk the affected area with you, and tell you in plain language what is going on and what it will take to address it. If the work needs a Yuma County permit, we tell you upfront - it usually adds two to three weeks to the start date but does not change what you pay us.
You receive a written estimate that spells out exactly what we will do, what materials we will use, and what the total cost is. We welcome questions before you sign anything - most Roll homeowners have a specific project in mind and want to understand it fully before committing.
The crew arrives when we say they will, completes the work as described, and leaves the site clean. If a county inspection is part of the job, we schedule it and walk you through the inspector's findings before we call the project complete.
We make regular runs out to Roll from Yuma - no long waits for a rural address. Call or message us and we will respond within one business day.
(928) 291-0632Roll is an unincorporated community in Yuma County, Arizona, located along U.S. Highway 95 between Yuma to the south and Quartzsite to the north. The population is small, and the area is defined by agricultural land, open desert, and rural homesteads rather than any dense residential development. Most residents own their homes and have been there for years - this is not a transient community, and properties here reflect that long-term ownership in the way they have been built onto, modified, and maintained over the decades.
The housing stock along the U.S. 95 corridor through Roll consists mostly of ranch-style homes on large lots, built from the 1970s through the 1990s. Stucco and concrete block exteriors are standard, and it is common to find detached carports, block perimeter walls, and outbuildings on properties that sit on an acre or more. The community is close-knit, and most homeowners know their neighbors across the highway or down the farm road. For masonry work, Roll homeowners are accustomed to working with contractors based in Yuma - Yuma is the nearest full-service city and the natural base for any contractor working this part of the county. Neighboring communities we also serve include Tacna and Wellton along the same corridor.
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Learn MoreWe serve Roll and the surrounding Yuma County corridor. Call us or send a message today and we will get back to you within one business day.