
San Dimas Masonry serves Covina homeowners with brick repair, tuckpointing, concrete flatwork, and retaining walls - our crew knows the postwar housing stock throughout this city and responds within one business day.

Covina homes built in the 1950s through 1970s have brick chimneys, garden walls, and decorative accents that are now 50 to 70 years old - and at that age, spalling faces and cracked units are common. Replacing damaged bricks before moisture gets behind the wall is far less expensive than waiting until structural damage sets in. See our full brick repair service for details on our process.
The hot, dry summers in Covina draw moisture out of mortar joints and leave them crumbly and recessed on older brick chimneys and walls. Tuckpointing replaces that soft material with fresh mortar before water seeps behind the brick and causes the kind of damage that requires full wall reconstruction. We match mortar color to the existing masonry so repairs blend in.
Many Covina driveways and walkways were poured in the 1950s and 1960s and now show the effects of 60-plus years of clay soil movement, freeze-thaw cycles, and tree root pressure. Cracked and sunken flatwork is one of the most common jobs we handle in this city, and we assess whether repair or full replacement makes more financial sense for each specific situation.
Winter rain in Covina can move soil fast on any yard with a slope, and older low retaining walls built without proper drainage behind them often fail when water pressure builds up. A new block or brick retaining wall with weep holes and compacted backfill gives a Covina yard real stability through the wet season.
Many Covina ranch homes have original brick chimneys from the 1950s and 1960s that have never had their mortar replaced. Years of thermal cycling from fire use and summer heat leave the crown and flashing cracked, and that lets water into the firebox and the attic framing around the chimney. Catching chimney damage early prevents the kind of interior water damage that costs far more to fix.
Older neighborhoods near downtown Covina, along Citrus Avenue and the surrounding streets, have homes with original brick and stone details that are worth preserving. Masonry restoration cleans, repoints, and structurally stabilizes those features without removing them, which maintains the character of the home and supports its value in an area where older homes with intact original details command a premium.
Covina grew fast after World War II, and most of its housing was built between the 1940s and 1970s. Those homes are now 50 to 80 years old, and many are showing it. Original concrete driveways from the 1950s, brick chimneys that have never had their mortar replaced, and garden walls built without proper drainage are all common across the city. The issue is not just age on its own - it is age combined with Covina-specific conditions. The expansive clay soils throughout the San Gabriel Valley swell when wet and shrink when dry, and that seasonal movement fractures concrete, pushes on foundation walls, and opens mortar joints that should have been sealed years ago.
Summers in Covina regularly hit the mid-90s Fahrenheit, sometimes topping 100, and that kind of heat accelerates mortar drying and concrete cracking. The older neighborhoods near downtown Covina and along the streets close to the 10 Freeway also have mature trees - some planted when these lots were first developed - and root intrusion into concrete flatwork is a regular job for us in this city. Winter rains expose drainage problems that accumulate all summer, and the cycle repeats. A masonry contractor who works in Covina regularly understands this sequence and knows where to look for damage before it becomes serious.
Our crew works throughout Covina regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect masonry work here. The ranch-style tract homes that dominate most of the city are a different masonry environment than the slightly older craftsman homes near downtown - ranch homes tend to need flatwork and chimney work, while older downtown-adjacent properties more often need careful mortar matching on original brick details. We handle both, and we have seen enough of Covina housing stock to know which neighborhoods have which problems.
Covina sits along the 10 Freeway corridor in the eastern San Gabriel Valley, and we reach jobs here quickly from our San Dimas base a few miles east. We pull permits through the City of Covina Building and Safety Division and are familiar with the local inspection schedule and requirements. The crew knows the city well enough to plan staging on the narrower residential streets in the older neighborhoods near Citrus Avenue and downtown.
We also serve neighboring West Covina, which borders Covina to the west and south, and Azusa to the northwest. If your project spans the border, or if you need estimates for properties in both cities, we can handle that in a single visit.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form, and we respond within one business day. We schedule site visits around your availability, including early mornings and Saturdays.
We inspect the masonry, check for soil drainage and root intrusion issues that may be driving the damage, and give you a written estimate before leaving. There is no cost to the estimate and no obligation to move forward.
For jobs that require a City of Covina building permit - retaining walls, block walls, and structural repairs - we handle the application and coordinate inspections. You do not need to deal with the permit office directly.
We complete the job on the agreed schedule and leave the site clean. For repairs involving new mortar or concrete, we provide curing guidance so the work holds up through Covina summers and winters.
Call us or submit the form below. We serve Covina homeowners and respond within one business day - free estimate, no obligation.
(562) 358-3205Covina is a city of about 48,000 people in the eastern San Gabriel Valley, roughly 22 miles east of downtown Los Angeles. The city grew rapidly after World War II as returning veterans and young families settled the valley, and the housing stock from that postwar boom still defines the city today - single-story ranch homes on modest lots, most of them built between the 1940s and 1970s. The city takes its name from a word meaning a sheltered cove or valley, and its citrus-farming origins are visible in some of the older neighborhoods where wide lots and mature trees reflect the agricultural past. The historic downtown area along Citrus Avenue includes the Covina Center for the Performing Arts and is a gathering point for the community.
Covina sits along the 10 Freeway in the San Gabriel Valley and is surrounded by cities with similar housing profiles - West Covina to the west, Glendora and Azusa to the north, and San Dimas to the east. The majority of housing units in Covina are owner-occupied single-family homes, and the combination of home age, clay soil conditions, and seasonal weather patterns makes masonry maintenance an ongoing need for most homeowners in the area.
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 MoreWe respond within one business day and serve Covina and the surrounding San Gabriel Valley. The longer a crack or open mortar joint sits, the more water gets in - call now.