In 1959, Guilio Fontana moved his business from Kings Park, NY to Bayport, NY. When Guilio retired in 1966, his twin sons John and Louis incorporated under the name G. Fontana & Sons, operating the business with the honesty and integrity instilled in them by their father. In the 1970's, John and Louis obtained a patent on a method for imprinting a design on paving slabs.
This method is still used to make our blocks today. In addition to our patio blocks, Fontana products also include hand made cement urns, bird baths, benches, game tables, and other specialty items.
This method is still used to make our blocks today. In addition to our patio blocks, Fontana products also include hand made cement urns, bird baths, benches, game tables, and other specialty items.
Services
This Cambridge Pavingstones shape is specially designed for rapid removal of stormwater. Aqua-Bric Type 1 provides the appearance and advantages of concrete pavingstone with the added benefits of a permeable system. Its nominal dimension is 5" x 10" with a 3 1/8" thickness. Slightly elongated openings along the sides work in harmony with the rectangular form.
All dimensions quoted in this catalog are nominal and are for guidance only. Actual sizes will vary, particularly on the products designed to replicate natural stone which have features such as riven profiles and fettled edges. The size and quantities given usually allow a nominal 5mm or more of sand joint width.
Each Kit is conveniently pre-packaged with the required number (36) of MaytRx 6 (6 inch) wall units to build one 22 in. Cambridge Pre-Packaged Column Mailbox Kits Includes a corosion-proof Fiberglass box with a powder-coated, forged metal door in an antique bronze finish. Complete with wallstones. Choose MaytRx 6 (Split Face or Renaissance) or Olde English Wall.
Be the best pizza chef in town and the talk of friends and family! Bake the most delicious, traditional Italian pizza pies, open-faced baguette pizzas, homemade breads as well as roast vegetables and a variety of dishes right in your own backyard. Made of Cambridge Olde English Wall with Cambridge Bullnose around the oven insert, as well as across the top of each section and the arched opening of the wood storage compartment.
Reviews (11)
Norm Marcioch
Jun 20, 2022
Shah Siddique
Jun 07, 2022
Manuel Paz
Oct 29, 2021
Frank Palermo
Oct 22, 2021
Jane Zederbaum
May 24, 2021
Sean Decker
Feb 22, 2021
ToniLou Rendazzo
Dec 29, 2020
Joe S.
Dec 23, 2020
Just had pavers delivered by Fontana with a forklift & the owner who was driving the piggyback forklift drive on my lawn & flower bed destroying everything including 2 sprinkler heads. When i called to complain they stuck up for him saying sometimes those things happen & wont compensate me for the damage! DO NOT USE FONTANA CONCRETE OF BAYPORT! Horrible customer service & they dont put their customers 1st!
Andrew Greene At Your Stove
Nov 28, 2020
Nicholas Nuzzi
Apr 18, 2020
Elitia L.
Jan 11, 2008
Fontana Concrete does driveway & patio installations, interlocking paving stones & retaining walls. but this review is on their sphinx (See Pic). Just east of the Supermarket of Beers (http://www.yelp.com/biz/beverage-central-bayport#hrid:kVeC4DA7WLLBvlfq0ovFxQ/query:beverage), on the South Side of Montauk Highway, is a ten-foot concrete oracle almost a hundred years old.
It was relocated from Blue Point and restored by Fontana Concrete, and is a roadside attraction famous for its promises of fortune and wealth: Local folklore has it that the Sphinx's nose was shot off in the thirties by a poverty-stricken vandal in defiance of it's prophecies, geared toward horny, money-hungry women. Today, there is sign posted in effort to deter impulsive or haphazard climbing, but the mesmerizing Sphinx continues to draw-in lower & middle class ladies with big dreams to climb on up. Check out the LI Oddities version of the story. http://www.lioddities.com/Roadside/sphinx.htm
It was relocated from Blue Point and restored by Fontana Concrete, and is a roadside attraction famous for its promises of fortune and wealth: Local folklore has it that the Sphinx's nose was shot off in the thirties by a poverty-stricken vandal in defiance of it's prophecies, geared toward horny, money-hungry women. Today, there is sign posted in effort to deter impulsive or haphazard climbing, but the mesmerizing Sphinx continues to draw-in lower & middle class ladies with big dreams to climb on up. Check out the LI Oddities version of the story. http://www.lioddities.com/Roadside/sphinx.htm