Here's the dimensions and specs:
680 sq. ft. 4", 3000 psi mono-slab with welded
wire mesh. 12"x24" perimeter footing with 3
horizontal #4 continuous rebar and #4 dowels at 4" O.C
For a project your size, none of this matters as the materials are a small part of the overall cost. The things that are getting you are machines and labor.
Cost=$5829, which is around $8.50/sq. ft.
Small jobs shoot up in cost per square foot because the costs to transport machines and use machines and operators for a full day (even when you only use them for part of the day) are the same regardless of the size of the job.
You can probably find a contractor that will estimate your job off of the material and size of the pad (they are out there!!!), but those are the companies that will do shotty work and leave you hanging. ... There are probably good reasons your general contractor recommended this company.
I had this problem when doing some flat work on my house. (We had to do our flat work in phases and some were small jobs.) I was able to get the cost way down by doing a few things:
- Allowing my contractor to do my job on a Saturday morning, (when they typically work a half-day) and at their convenience. I lost my ability to pick when the work happened, but they committed to showing up in a certain month to get it done. (This enabled my contractor to avoid having to charge me for a full day of work for the workers and machinery operators, when they only had a half day of work.)
- Allowing my contractor to drop off machines he was going to use on my job and store them on my property during the week as he passed by. (This allowed him to be more efficient and skip a trip to his machinery yard the day of my job to get the equipment.)
- Accept tooled joints over saw cut joints or do the saw cut joints myself (this avoids an extra partial-day trip)
You might also be able to get creative with your contractor and understand what the sources of his cost are to get the price down. For example, you may be able to go to a local equipment rental and rent the machinery he needs for less money than it would cost him to truck, unload, and operate his own equipment. (He'll use his operators to do this, who are up to 4X as expensive as the one person who will do the delivery for the rental company.) Etc.