
Highland Deck and Fence serves Bloomington, CA, building vinyl and wood privacy fences, custom decks, covered patios, and pergolas for homeowners throughout this unincorporated Inland Empire community. We have operated since 2017, know the San Bernardino County permit process, and respond to every new inquiry within one business day.

Bloomington summers run well above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and wood fencing that is not consistently sealed dries out and splits within a few seasons. We install vinyl fencing throughout Bloomington with posts set in concrete deep enough for the area's expansive soils - so the fence stays plumb through the wet and dry cycle.
Many Bloomington homeowners prefer the look and lower upfront cost of wood privacy fencing. We build with pressure-treated posts and kiln-dried boards and seal every fence before we leave - which matters here because untreated wood in the Inland Empire dries and cracks faster than most homeowners expect.
Bloomington homes are mostly single-story ranch and tract-style houses on slab foundations with private backyards. That property type is well-suited to a ground-level or low-rise deck that extends the living space without a complex foundation build. We size and design decks for the typical Bloomington lot.
In a community where summers regularly push past 100 degrees, shade over a patio is not optional - it is what makes a backyard usable from June through September. We build attached and freestanding patio covers in Bloomington sized for the typical ranch-home footprint, and we pull the county permit for every structural cover.
Bloomington housing stock spans from the 1950s through the 1990s, and original wood decks and concrete patio edges from that era are commonly at the end of their useful life. If your existing deck has soft spots, cracked ledger connections, or leaning posts, we assess whether targeted repair or a full replacement makes more sense financially.
A pergola over a backyard patio in Bloomington gives you a defined outdoor space without the cost of a full covered structure. Shade cloth or a climbing plant over a pergola cuts direct sun significantly in the Inland Empire summer. We build freestanding and attached pergolas and handle the county permit process for both.
Bloomington is a dense, family-oriented community with a housing stock that is mostly 30 to 70 years old - an age range where fences, decks, and concrete flatwork are commonly ready for replacement. The area sits on expansive soils that expand when wet and shrink when dry, putting continuous stress on post footings and slab edges. Unlike a city with its own building department, Bloomington is unincorporated, so all permits go through San Bernardino County Land Use Services. That is a detail that matters for the project timeline, and it is something a contractor who has only worked in incorporated cities may not know how to navigate efficiently.
The climate here is unforgiving for outdoor materials. Summer temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and that sustained heat dries out unprotected wood faster than in milder climates. Wood fences installed without a quality sealant will crack and split within two to three seasons in Bloomington. Santa Ana wind events every fall put additional stress on fence panels and patio covers that are not properly anchored. These are not problems unique to one house on one block - they are patterns we see throughout the community, and accounting for them at the design stage is the difference between a structure that holds up and one that needs repairs in a couple of years.
Our crew works throughout Bloomington regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect deck builder and fence work here. Because Bloomington is unincorporated, we file permits directly with the San Bernardino County Building and Safety Division rather than a city building department - a process we know well from serving multiple unincorporated communities in the area.
Interstate 10 runs along the northern edge of Bloomington and is the main artery locals use to reach Fontana, Rialto, and San Bernardino. Homes on the streets close to the freeway tend to see more road dust and vibration than properties deeper in the residential neighborhoods near Bloomington Community Park or Bloomington High School. For those freeway-adjacent homes, solid-panel fencing rather than open-board styles makes a noticeable difference in noise and dust reduction.
Fontana sits directly to the west of Bloomington, and we regularly work in both communities on the same scheduling run. Rialto is immediately to the east - we serve Rialto as well, and the housing stock in all three areas is similar enough that we can move between them without a learning curve on every new job.
Call or submit your project details online and we respond within one business day. The estimate is free and there is no commitment required from the first conversation.
We come to the property, look at the site conditions, and provide a written itemized estimate. If a permit is needed, we tell you up front what the San Bernardino County process looks like for your specific project type and what it adds to the cost and timeline.
We submit the permit application to San Bernardino County Land Use Services and order materials once the permit is in review. Most projects in Bloomington start within one to two weeks of permit approval.
Vinyl and wood fence installs typically take one to two days. Patio cover and deck builds run three to seven business days. We coordinate any required county inspections and walk you through the finished project before the crew packs up.
We handle county permit applications and serve the full Bloomington area. Reach out today and we reply within one business day.
(909) 737-6946Bloomington is an unincorporated community in San Bernardino County with a population of roughly 23,000 to 26,000 residents, sitting between Rialto and Fontana in the Inland Empire. It is a dense, family-oriented neighborhood with a relatively young population, and most households here own their homes and have lived in the community for years. The housing stock is almost entirely single-family detached homes - mostly ranch and tract-style properties built from the 1950s through the 1990s on slab foundations with private lots. You can find more background on the community at the Bloomington Wikipedia page.
Interstate 10 forms the northern boundary of Bloomington, and many residents commute west toward Los Angeles or east toward San Bernardino along that corridor. Bloomington Community Park is the main gathering point in the community, and Bloomington High School serves as one of the most recognizable landmarks in the area. Neighboring Rialto to the east and Fontana to the west share similar housing types and are part of the same service area we cover throughout the week.
Durable pressure-treated wood decks built to last outdoors.
Learn MoreProtect and refresh your deck with professional staining and sealing.
Learn MoreCustom wood and privacy fences installed for security and style.
Learn MoreEnjoy the outdoors bug-free with a screened porch or deck.
Learn MoreFree estimates, no pressure, and we handle San Bernardino County permits from start to finish.