Express Concrete delivers ready mix concrete to Eltham (SE9) from our Erith production plant — five miles by road, around 25 minutes door-to-door in normal traffic. That makes Eltham one of the closest catchments we serve, and one where same-day delivery is genuinely standard rather than an exception. We have been the family-run choice for SE9 foundations, driveways, slabs and screed since 1991.
Every load to Eltham is batched at Erith to a BS 8500 mix design, ticketed at the plant, and on your site within the workability window. The plant is QSRMC accredited — see our accreditations — and every truck arrives with a printed delivery docket recording the mix design, batch time, water-cement ratio and plant of origin. That documentation is useful for building control, your structural engineer or your insurer, and it is something the volumetric competitors in SE9 cannot match.
Whether you need 0.5 m³ for a domestic post-hole or a sequenced commercial pour for a new-build slab, Eltham orders go through a single phone call to plant manager Oliver Wilson at Erith. Read more about how we work on the Our Promise page or use the concrete calculator to estimate the volume you need before calling.
We supply the full BS 8500 range to SE9, batched against a fixed mix design at Erith. The right grade depends on the job — get it wrong on the cheap side and the surface cracks within three winters; over-spec it and you waste several hundred pounds per cubic metre on a job that does not need it. Our concrete strength classes guide explains every grade in detail.
If you are unsure which grade is right, call Oliver at Erith and describe the job — the trench depth, the load it carries, the finish you want. He will spec the mix from there. Composition queries (sand and aggregate ratios, water content) are covered in our guide on ready mix concrete and sand content.
Order before 11am for same-day delivery on most SE9 jobs. The Erith-to-Eltham drive is five miles via the A2 or the South Circular, typically twenty-five minutes outside peak — closer to thirty-five during the morning rush or school run. Continuous pours of thirty cubic metres or more need 48 hours’ notice so we can sequence trucks back-to-back from the yard.
We size the truck to the access on your road. Most SE9 streets accommodate an 8 m³ wagon, which is the most economical load size for any pour over four cubic metres. Tighter streets around the older terraces near Eltham High Street and Mottingham — and many of the side roads off Eltham Road — are sometimes too narrow for an 8 m³ truck, in which case we run two 4 m³ mini-mix loads back-to-back. Tell us the postcode at quote time and we will spec the right vehicle. For more on lead times, see our guide to how quickly ready mixed concrete can be delivered in London.
Eltham sits on the London Clay formation, like much of south-east London. For domestic foundations that means trench fill in a clay subsoil with seasonal heave-and-shrink behaviour, particularly noticeable around the higher ground towards Mottingham and on the slope down to Eltham Park. The grade you specify and the depth your engineer sets both matter more here than they do on a sandier foundation.
For straightforward strip and trench-fill foundations on Eltham clay, C20/Gen 3 with polypropylene fibre is usually the right call. The C20 strength carries the load, the fibre handles the surface micro-cracking risk that plastic clay heave creates over the first two winters. For two-storey extensions, point-load footings or anywhere your engineer marks a higher spec, step up to C25/30. We will not push you to C30/37 if your project does not need it; we will not let you specify C16 if your site does. The technical detail behind grade selection sits in our strength classes guide.
The other clay-soil factor is workability. London clay foundations often have water collecting at the base of the trench (especially after rain) and the concrete needs to displace it cleanly without segregating. We default to a slump of around 100 mm for SE9 trench-fill — high enough to flow into the corners, low enough that the cement does not wash out. If the forecast for your pour day is wet or cold, ask Oliver about a retarder admixture; we can extend the workability window from ninety minutes to around two hours, which is often the difference between a clean pour and a cold joint. See can you pour concrete in winter for the seasonal version of this conversation.
Same-day on most jobs ordered before 11am. The Erith-to-Eltham drive is around 25 minutes; the load leaves the yard shortly after order confirmation. Big continuous pours need 48 hours’ notice.
0.5 m³ minimum. Loads under the standard 6 m³ or 8 m³ truck capacity carry a short-load surcharge — Oliver at Erith will quote you on enquiry.
C20/Gen 3 with polypropylene fibre is the practical minimum on most SE9 clay sites. Step up to C25/30 if the building is two-storey, carries point loads, or your engineer specifies. See our guide to ready mix concrete for foundations for the detail.
On most SE9 arterials and modern residential roads, yes. On older terraces around Eltham High Street and Mottingham, often not. Tell us the postcode at quote time and we will spec the right truck — usually two 4 m³ mini-mix loads if the 8 m³ wagon won’t fit.
Yes. We can supply with a retarder admixture to extend workability if the forecast turns cold or wet. See can you pour concrete in winter for the seasonal pour planning advice.
Our Erith plant is in Erith DA8, on the south side of the river. Five miles from Eltham town centre, around 25 minutes by road in normal traffic.