Rialto Concrete and Masonry is a masonry contractor serving Bloomington, CA with brick repair, concrete block wall construction, and foundation work for homes throughout this San Bernardino County community - and we have been working in the Inland Empire since 2020, repairing brick on ranch homes and rebuilding block walls that have been taking heat cycles and soil movement since the 1960s.

Bloomington homes from the 1960s and 1970s often have original brick chimneys, planters, and low perimeter walls whose mortar joints have dried out and crumbled from decades of 100-plus-degree summers. Once mortar fails, water finds its way in during winter rains and the damage spreads quickly. Our brick repair work matches the original mortar profile and replaces only what is failing - not the whole structure.
Block perimeter walls are nearly universal on Bloomington residential lots, and many of the original walls built in the 1960s and 1970s lack the footing depth and rebar reinforcement that San Bernardino County now requires. Expansive clay soil has been pushing on those old footings every winter, and the lean or cracking you see today is the result. We rebuild to current county standards so the wall handles the next 40 years of soil movement, not just looks fixed.
Most Bloomington homes sit on slab foundations built during the postwar and mid-century tract expansions, and slabs poured on expansive clay without deep footings are vulnerable to the wet-dry cycles this area sees every year. Sticking doors, diagonal drywall cracks, and sloping floors are the usual first signs. We diagnose what is causing the movement before we quote any repair, because patching a symptom without addressing the soil condition underneath is money spent twice.
Properties along Bloomington's sloped streets sometimes need retaining walls to manage grade changes and keep soil in place through winter rains. A wall without proper drainage behind it builds up hydrostatic pressure during wet seasons and eventually bows or fails. We design and build walls with drainage systems sized for the conditions on your specific lot, not a one-size solution copied from another job.
Original concrete driveways on Bloomington properties built between the 1950s and 1980s are now reaching the end of their useful life. The combination of clay soil movement below and extreme summer heat above creates cracking patterns that patching alone cannot fix long-term. Paver driveways handle seasonal soil movement better than poured concrete because each unit can flex slightly without cracking - but only when the base is built correctly for Inland Empire soil conditions.
Tuckpointing - scraping out old, degraded mortar and packing in fresh material - is one of the most common maintenance needs for brick and block structures on older Bloomington properties. Mortar joints that have pulled away from brick faces are an open door for water during the rainy season, which is why this work is worth doing before you see water damage inside. Done properly, fresh repointing protects the masonry for another 20 to 30 years.
Most of Bloomington was built between the 1950s and the 1990s, which means the dominant housing stock is now 30 to 70 years old. At that age, concrete driveways, block perimeter walls, and brick chimneys are well past the point where original materials simply hold together on their own. The postwar and mid-century tract homes that make up the majority of the community were built for affordability and function, not for the kind of soil movement and thermal stress they have absorbed over decades. Many of the original foundations used shallow footings that work reasonably well in stable soil but become problematic when the ground beneath them keeps shifting. Bloomington sits on soil with significant clay content - clay that swells when winter rain arrives and shrinks back during the long, dry stretch from late spring through fall. That annual cycle puts lateral and upward pressure on everything it touches, and masonry structures bear that load directly.
The climate adds pressure from the opposite direction. Bloomington is deep enough inland that summer temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and the combination of extreme heat and very low humidity is hard on masonry joints in particular. Mortar that might last 25 years on the coast can need attention in 15 years here. The fall Santa Ana wind events - hot, dry gusts that reach 50 miles per hour or more - scour exposed surfaces and can dislodge loose brick and chimney material that would have held together through a calmer season. Because Bloomington is an unincorporated area rather than its own city, all permits and code compliance go through San Bernardino County rather than a city building department, which means working with a contractor who knows the county process is especially important for any job that requires inspection.
Our crew works throughout Bloomington regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect masonry work here. Because Bloomington is unincorporated, all structural permits go through San Bernardino County Land Use Services, Building and Safety rather than a city office. We handle that process as part of the job - submitting plans, coordinating county inspections, and making sure structural work meets the current California and county requirements for seismic zones.
Bloomington sits between Rialto to the west and Fontana to the east, with Interstate 10 running along the northern edge of the community. Most of the residential streets run south of the freeway, and the homes nearest the 10 tend to show more wear on driveways and concrete flatwork from the vibration and heavy truck traffic on nearby surface streets. We also know the housing patterns here well: properties near Bloomington Community Park and the streets around Bloomington High School represent some of the older housing in the area, with many original block walls and brick features that need careful repair rather than wholesale replacement.
We serve neighboring Colton to the south, where we see similar postwar housing stock and the same clay soil conditions. We also work regularly in Rialto just to the west - and if your project is near either city boundary, we can often cover neighboring properties on the same visit.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form. We respond within 1 business day and set up a time to come look at the property - no commitment needed at this stage.
We walk the property and look at the existing masonry, soil conditions, and drainage before writing an estimate. We break out materials, labor, and any county permit costs separately - and we do not quote structural work over the phone, because footing requirements in Bloomington can vary from one block to the next depending on soil depth.
We handle the San Bernardino County permit application and schedule the crew around your availability. Most residential masonry jobs in Bloomington run one to three days of active work on site. You do not need to be home the entire time, but we walk the site with you at the start and end of each work day.
When the work is complete, we do a final walkthrough together, answer any questions about ongoing care, and clear all materials and debris from the property. If anything is not right, we address it before we leave.
We serve homeowners throughout Bloomington, CA - from the neighborhoods near Bloomington Community Park to the streets closest to the 10 Freeway. Call or send a message and we will get back to you within 1 business day.
(909) 546-5159Bloomington is an unincorporated community in San Bernardino County with a population of roughly 23,000 to 26,000 people, sitting in the central Inland Empire between Rialto to the west and Fontana to the east. Because it is unincorporated, Bloomington does not have its own city hall - residents and contractors deal with San Bernardino County for permits, code enforcement, and public services. The community is almost entirely residential, built out primarily during the postwar suburban expansion from the 1950s through the 1990s. Single-family ranch-style homes on modest lots are the dominant property type, with block perimeter walls, concrete driveways, and stucco exteriors that are characteristic of the broader Inland Empire housing stock. The community is well-documented as a densely populated, predominantly owner-occupied area where families have settled long-term - which makes property maintenance and durable repairs especially important to homeowners here.
Interstate 10 marks the northern edge of Bloomington, and Valley Boulevard runs through the heart of the community connecting it to neighboring cities. The mix of older homes near Bloomington High School and the quieter residential streets closer to the southern edge of the community represents the range of housing ages we typically encounter on jobs here. To the south, Colton shares similar housing ages and soil conditions, and we work there regularly as well. The broader San Bernardino County area, where Bloomington sits, is part of the Inland Empire - one of the fastest-growing regions in California over the past four decades, which means a wide range of housing eras and building standards exist side by side throughout the community.
Build strong retaining walls that hold soil and protect your property.
Learn MoreAdd a stunning, functional fireplace crafted from quality masonry materials.
Learn MoreTransform any surface with natural stone veneer for lasting beauty.
Learn MoreInstall durable block walls that provide a stable foundation for structures.
Learn MoreDesign and build attractive walkways that improve access and curb appeal.
Learn MoreSeal and reinforce mortar joints to protect your brickwork from water damage.
Learn MoreCall us or send a message for a free on-site estimate. We work throughout Bloomington and the surrounding Inland Empire communities.