
San Dimas Masonry serves Claremont homeowners with stone veneer installation, brick repair, tuckpointing, retaining wall construction, and outdoor masonry - we are familiar with the Craftsman bungalows, Spanish Colonial homes, and foothill properties throughout the city and respond within one business day.
Claremont homes age well when their masonry is maintained. We help long-term owners protect that investment with work that matches the character of the original construction.

Claremont homeowners near the Colleges often choose stone veneer to add material depth to a front facade, fireplace surround, or exterior column without the weight and cost of full natural stone construction. Matching the texture and tone of veneer to the character of an older Craftsman or Spanish Colonial home requires careful material selection - not a catalog pick. See our full stone veneer installation service for a breakdown of materials and application methods.
Many homes near The Village and the Claremont Colleges date from the 1920s through 1950s, and their original brick chimneys and garden walls have been through a century of hot summers and Santa Ana wind events. Replacing spalled units and repointing softened mortar joints before water gets behind the brick face is the most cost-effective maintenance step for these homes - and we match mortar color to the original so repairs are not obvious.
Homes in northern Claremont near the Thompson Creek Trail and the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains often have sloped yards that need proper retention to stay stable through winter rains and Santa Ana wind events. A concrete block or natural stone retaining wall built with engineered drainage and a compacted gravel backfill keeps soil in place through the full wet season without the hydrostatic pressure that causes older walls to fail.
Claremont has a high concentration of long-term owner-occupied homes with original brick, block, and stone details that are part of the property's character and value. Masonry restoration - cleaning, repointing, and stabilizing existing material - preserves those details without replacing them, which is the right approach for homeowners who want to maintain architectural authenticity rather than covering over history with new materials.
Older Claremont homes with mature front landscaping often have original concrete walkways that have been lifted by tree roots or cracked by decades of clay soil movement. Replacing a damaged walkway with pavers or new poured concrete - designed to fit the scale and style of an older home - improves both curb appeal and daily safety for a property with significant foot traffic through its front yard.
Claremont homes built before 1960 commonly have original brick chimneys that have never been professionally inspected or repointed. Hot summers accelerate mortar breakdown at the crown and along the stack, and Santa Ana winds stress the cap and flashing. A failing chimney on an older Claremont home is not just a masonry problem - if water is getting into the firebox and into the framing around the stack, the repair scope grows quickly.
Claremont has a housing stock that skews older than most neighboring cities - a significant share of the homes near the Claremont Colleges were built between the 1920s and 1960s, and even the newer foothill developments in the northern parts of the city date from the 1980s and 1990s. That age spread means masonry issues here are rarely straightforward. Craftsman bungalows near The Village often have original brick and mortar that requires careful color matching and historically appropriate repair methods. Spanish Colonial Revival homes have clay tile details and stucco surfaces that need different handling than a standard postwar ranch house. Getting the materials and techniques right matters in a city where homeowners take pride in their properties and long-term owners care about architectural continuity.
Claremont summers are hot and dry - temperatures regularly reach the 90s and occasionally top 100 degrees Fahrenheit - and that kind of heat draws moisture from mortar joints faster than in cooler coastal cities. Fall brings Santa Ana wind events that can gust over 50 mph and physically stress chimneys, caps, and exposed masonry walls. Northern Claremont near the San Gabriel Mountains sits in a designated fire hazard severity zone, which creates both ember exposure risk for porous masonry surfaces and specific code requirements for roofing and vent materials that homeowners need to be aware of when planning exterior work. A masonry contractor working in Claremont regularly understands how these conditions connect and where to look for the damage they cause before it becomes serious.
Our crew works throughout Claremont regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect masonry work here. The residential streets near the Claremont Colleges - where Craftsman bungalows and Spanish Colonial homes sit behind mature tree canopies - are a different environment than the newer stucco and tile-roof homes in the foothill neighborhoods north of Baseline Road. Both types of property show up in our work schedule, and we carry the materials and knowledge for both.
We pull permits through the City of Claremont Community Development Department and are familiar with their inspection requirements for masonry structures and retaining walls. Indian Hill Boulevard gives us a reliable north-south route through the city, and we know the residential streets near The Village and the Colleges well enough to plan parking and material staging on tighter lots without disrupting neighbors.
We also serve neighboring Upland directly to the east, and Pomona to the south. If you own property in more than one of these cities, we can schedule estimate visits together and keep project coordination simple.
Call us or submit a request through our estimate form, and we respond within one business day. We schedule site visits around your availability, including early mornings and Saturdays.
We walk the property, assess the scope, and give you a written estimate with no obligation. For older Claremont homes, we take time at this stage to review material options that suit the architectural style - you should not have a veneer or mortar color that reads wrong against the original exterior.
For jobs that require a permit, we handle the application and inspection scheduling with the City of Claremont. We stay in contact throughout the project and are reachable by phone when questions come up during construction.
We remove all debris and leave the site clean before we consider the job complete. You walk through the finished work with us, and we address anything that needs attention before we close out.
We serve Claremont homeowners from our San Dimas base - a short drive west along the 210 corridor. Responses within one business day, free estimates, no obligation.
(562) 358-3205Claremont is a city of roughly 36,000 residents on the eastern edge of Los Angeles County, directly adjacent to the San Bernardino County line and the city of Upland. The Claremont Colleges - a consortium of seven nationally recognized institutions including Pomona College and Harvey Mudd College - define the center of the city and draw visitors and academics from across the country. The residential neighborhoods immediately surrounding the Colleges contain many of the city's oldest homes, primarily Craftsman bungalows and Spanish Colonial Revival-style houses built from the 1920s through the 1950s with stucco exteriors, clay tile roofs, and original brick details. These are the properties where masonry quality matters most, because the architecture is worth preserving and buyers in this market pay attention to it.
Claremont's downtown, known as The Village, is a walkable commercial district just east of the Colleges, lined with restaurants, shops, and historic buildings. North of the city, the San Gabriel Mountains rise steeply and the Thompson Creek Trail corridor marks the transition to foothill neighborhoods where homes are larger and newer. Neighboring Upland shares Claremont's foothill setting and similar housing stock, while Pomona to the south and west has a larger share of postwar tract homes and older commercial masonry that presents different repair needs than the older residential neighborhoods in Claremont.
Restore your foundation's stability and protect your home's structural integrity.
Learn MoreBuild strong retaining walls that manage slopes and prevent soil erosion.
Learn MoreRevive aging masonry surfaces to their original strength and appearance.
Learn MoreInstall custom masonry fireplaces that add warmth and character to your home.
Learn MoreEnhance your home's exterior or interior with natural stone veneer accents.
Learn MoreConstruct solid concrete block walls for lasting structural performance.
Learn MoreInstall foundation block walls that provide reliable structural support.
Learn MoreBuild custom outdoor kitchens using durable masonry materials built to last.
Learn MoreDesign and build attractive masonry walkways that complement your landscape.
Learn MoreInstall handcrafted brick walls that combine timeless style with lasting strength.
Learn MoreRepoint brick joints to seal gaps, improve appearance, and prevent water damage.
Learn MoreCall us today or submit a free estimate request - we respond within one business day and serve all of Claremont and the surrounding Inland Valley.