
Rialto Deck & Fence has served Bloomington, CA since 2019, building wood and vinyl fences, custom decks, covered patios, and outdoor structures for homeowners throughout this unincorporated San Bernardino County community - and we handle all county permit coordination as part of every job.

Bloomington's densely packed single-family neighborhoods put properties close together, and a solid wood fence is the most practical way to create separation and privacy on a modest lot. Our wood and privacy fence installation includes deep post-sets sized for Bloomington's expansive soil conditions so the fence stays plumb through the wet-dry cycles that loosen shallow footings over time.
Many Bloomington homes from the 1950s through 1990s were built on slab foundations with minimal backyard development - meaning the outdoor space has never been built out. A custom deck plan works around your slab, yard size, and how you actually use the space, rather than a generic layout that ignores the lot.
For Bloomington homeowners replacing an aging wood deck, composite boards handle the Inland Empire heat cycle better than wood. They don't dry out and crack under sustained temperatures above 100 degrees, don't absorb winter moisture, and need no staining or sealing - which matters when you want a deck that holds up without annual maintenance.
Vinyl is a strong choice for Bloomington properties that want a clean, low-maintenance boundary fence. Unlike wood, vinyl doesn't split or gray under Bloomington's intense sun exposure, and it won't absorb water from the occasional wet winter - making it a practical long-term option for owner-occupied homes and rental properties alike.
Bloomington summer temperatures regularly top 100 degrees, and an uncovered deck or patio is effectively unusable during afternoon hours for most of the year. A solid patio cover or lattice structure drops surface temperatures enough to make outdoor space usable from morning through early evening, even in July and August.
Bloomington's postwar housing stock means many existing deck structures were built decades ago, often without permits, and have absorbed years of Inland Empire heat and soil movement. We assess the full structure - footings, frame, ledger, and surface - before recommending repair versus full replacement, so you're not paying for a new deck when a targeted repair will do the job.
Bloomington's housing stock - mostly single-family homes built between the 1950s and 1990s - is at the age where original outdoor structures are showing their years. Concrete driveways, patios, and walkways from that era are frequently cracked and sunken, and wood fences set decades ago often have posts that have loosened from the soil movement that is normal in this part of San Bernardino County. The soil here - a mix of sandy alluvial deposits and pockets of expansive clay common throughout the Inland Empire - expands when wet and contracts when dry, and that seasonal cycle is one of the main reasons fence posts shift and deck footings move over time.
The climate adds to the maintenance burden. Summers in Bloomington regularly hit above 100 degrees, baking moisture out of exposed wood and degrading surface sealants faster than cooler areas. Fall Santa Ana wind events - which push gusts well above 50 mph through the Inland Empire every year - put lateral stress on fences and patio structures that were not designed for that load. Because Bloomington is unincorporated, all permit work goes through San Bernardino County rather than a city building department, which is a process that rewards contractors who know it well.
Because Bloomington is an unincorporated San Bernardino County community, our permit applications go through San Bernardino County Land Use Services - Building and Safety rather than a city hall. We know that process well, and we handle permit submissions and inspection scheduling as part of every Bloomington project.
We work throughout the community regularly - from the neighborhoods near Bloomington Community Park to the residential streets closer to Bloomington High School and the areas that run along the south side of Interstate 10. Bloomington sits between Rialto and Fontana, and many of the homes we work on here are the same postwar ranch-style and tract houses we see throughout this part of the Inland Empire.
We also serve communities adjacent to Bloomington. If your property falls just over the border into Colton or into Fontana, we cover those areas too and the same crew handles the work.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we'll respond within one business day. Let us know the type of project - fence, deck, patio cover, or repair - and we'll schedule a free on-site estimate at a time that works for you.
We visit the property to measure the space, check soil and footing conditions, and assess any existing structures. You get a written estimate with a full cost breakdown before any commitment - no surprise charges once work begins.
For permitted projects, we submit to San Bernardino County Land Use Services and schedule inspections. Once the permit is approved, we give you a construction start date and a realistic completion window before we mobilize.
We complete the build, pass any required county inspections, and clean the site before the final walkthrough. You're not left managing leftover materials or chasing inspectors on your own.
We serve all of Bloomington and the surrounding unincorporated areas. No obligation, no pressure - just a written estimate and honest advice.
(909) 546-5562Bloomington is an unincorporated community of approximately 23,000 to 26,000 people located in San Bernardino County, tucked between Rialto to the east and Fontana to the west along the I-10 corridor. It is not its own city - services including building permits, code enforcement, and road maintenance are administered by the county. The community is predominantly residential, with single-family homes making up the large majority of the housing stock. Most of those homes were built during the postwar suburban expansion, with construction concentrated from the 1950s through the 1990s. The neighborhood feel is working-class and family-oriented, with a relatively young median age and a high rate of long-term owner-occupancy. According to the Wikipedia article on Bloomington, the community has been part of the Inland Empire's steady residential growth and remains a primarily owner-occupied neighborhood.
The physical layout of Bloomington is flat to gently rolling, with Interstate 10 running along the northern edge of the community. Bloomington Community Park is the central public gathering point for local families, and Bloomington High School is one of the most recognized landmarks in the community. Residents in the north part of Bloomington are minutes from Fontana, while those in the south and east are close to Rialto and Colton. The mix of homes from different eras means property conditions vary quite a bit from block to block, which is something our crew accounts for on every assessment.
Low-maintenance composite boards that stay beautiful year after year.
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Learn MoreContact Rialto Deck & Fence today for a free on-site estimate - we respond within one business day and handle all county permit coordination.