Express Concrete delivers ready mix concrete to Leyton (E10) from our Barking production plant — five miles by road via the A12 or Lea Bridge Road, typically twenty to thirty minutes outside peak. E10 sits inside our east London catchment and our schedule covers everything from the loft-conversion and rear-extension strip foundations that dominate the typical Leyton week through to commercial slab pours along the Olympic Park edge.
Every Leyton load is batched at Barking to a BS 8500 mix design and arrives with a printed delivery ticket recording the mix design, batch time, water-cement ratio and plant of origin. That documentation matters in E10 because Waltham Forest building control sees a high volume of loft-conversion and side-return extension submissions — the docket is the simplest evidence of what was actually poured against what the engineer specified. Our QSRMC accreditation backs every load.
Plant manager Oliver Wilson runs the Barking yard. He has been routing trucks through Leyton’s terraced streets for years and knows which side roads east of Lea Bridge Road need a 4 m³ mini-mix instead of an 8 m³ wagon. Use the concrete calculator for volume or read about the Barking operation on the plant page.
Leyton’s mix profile is dominated by domestic foundation work — strip footings for loft conversions and rear extensions, smaller slabs for garden offices and garage bases. The full BS 8500 range is available; the concrete strength classes guide covers each grade in detail.
For most Leyton loft-conversion strip footings Oliver will recommend C20/Gen 3 with polypropylene fibre. For the side-return extensions taking heavier point loads, step to C25/30. Composition queries are in our aggregates and sand guide.
Order before 11am for same-day delivery on most Leyton jobs. The Barking-to-Leyton drive is five miles via the A12 or Lea Bridge Road — typically twenty to thirty minutes outside peak, longer through the morning rush. Continuous pours of thirty cubic metres or more need 48 hours’ notice for truck sequencing.
Truck size is the variable that catches a lot of E10 jobs. The wider Lea Bridge Road, High Road Leyton and the modern estate streets accommodate an 8 m³ wagon — the most economical load for any pour over four cubic metres. The older terraced streets east of Lea Bridge Road and around Leyton Midland Road (the streets built for tighter Victorian and Edwardian housing) often do not. Tell us your postcode at quote time and Oliver will spec the right vehicle. For more on lead times see delivery speed and the step-by-step ordering guide.
Leyton east of Lea Bridge Road has a particular street profile that catches a lot of suppliers out. The Victorian and Edwardian terraced housing was built for a road width that comfortably handled a horse cart and a delivery van; an 8 m³ ready mix wagon, with a 9-tonne axle weight and a turning circle measured in driveway widths, is a different proposition entirely. Several streets — Calderon Road, Murchison Road, Adelaide Road and the side roads off Capworth Street — simply will not let an 8 m³ truck turn at the end without going up onto the pavement.
Our standard practice for E10 jobs east of Lea Bridge Road is to default to a 4 m³ mini-mix and run two trucks back to back if the volume calls for it. The cost difference per cubic metre is small enough that most Leyton customers prefer the safety of a smaller truck on a tight street to the saving of a single 8 m³ wagon that ends up reversing nervously. For wider streets — High Road Leyton, the modernised estate roads and the Olympic Park-edge roads — the 8 m³ goes through without trouble.
Tell us your postcode and the access at the time of quote. Oliver at Barking will spec the truck size up front so there are no surprises on the day, and if your road is one of the genuinely tight ones, he will plan two 4 m³ runs with a fifteen-minute gap so the second arrives just as the first finishes discharging. For seasonal pour planning advice see can you pour concrete in winter.
Call the Barking plant or fill in the enquiry form. Tell us the E10 postcode, the volume, the grade, the access on your road, and your slot. We will reply with the price, the truck plan and the mix design.
Same-day on most jobs ordered before 11am. The Barking-to-Leyton drive is twenty to thirty minutes off-peak.
On Lea Bridge Road, High Road Leyton and the modernised estate streets, yes. East of Lea Bridge Road on the older terraces, often not — we default to 4 m³ mini-mix there.
Most Leyton loft-conversion strip footings use C20/Gen 3 with polypropylene fibre. Two-storey or load-bearing extensions step up to C25/30 — see concrete for foundations.
C20/Gen 3 with fibre for a family-car driveway. Step up to C25/30 with steel mesh for regular van traffic — see ready mix concrete for driveways.
0.5 m³. Short-load surcharge applies — Oliver at Barking will quote on enquiry.
Yes. Every Express load arrives with a printed ticket showing the BS 8500 mix design, batch time, water-cement ratio and plant of origin.
Yes. Barking plant supplies GGBS-blended low-carbon mixes alongside the standard range.