
Complete Corona Deck & Fence is the deck builder Rancho Cucamonga homeowners call for pergola installation, custom deck design and build, and patio cover construction. We have served the Inland Empire since 2016, and we respond to every new inquiry within 1 business day.

Rancho Cucamonga backyards bake under triple-digit summer heat, and a well-built pergola gives you shaded outdoor space without closing off airflow. Our pergola installation work uses wind-rated anchoring designed for the Santa Ana wind loads the foothills here regularly see.
A solid patio cover keeps the afternoon sun off your back patio and protects outdoor furniture from the UV exposure that bleaches and cracks materials fast in Rancho Cucamonga. Whether your home is in the flat southern tracts or on a hillside lot near Alta Loma, we size and anchor patio covers to hold up under the wind events common in this part of the Inland Empire.
Many homes in Rancho Cucamonga were built in the 1980s and 1990s on standard-size lots with plain concrete patio slabs that are now cracked and overdue for replacement. A custom-built deck adds usable outdoor square footage and works with the existing yard layout rather than against it.
Decks built in the 1990s in Rancho Cucamonga are now 25 to 35 years old - many have boards that have dried, cracked, or cupped from decades of inland heat and UV exposure. We assess what can be repaired versus what needs full replacement and give you an honest answer before any work starts.
Santa Ana wind events are hard on wood fencing throughout Rancho Cucamonga - cracked boards, leaning posts, and sections that have pulled away from their concrete footings are common after a strong wind season. We set fence posts in deep concrete footings and use hardware rated for the wind loads this area regularly experiences.
Vinyl fencing holds up better than wood over time in Rancho Cucamonga because it does not crack, split, or need to be repainted after years of exposure to intense UV and dry heat. For families with yards near the foothills where fire risk is a real seasonal concern, vinyl does not carry the same combustibility risk as an untreated wood fence.
Rancho Cucamonga was incorporated in 1977 and grew quickly through master-planned subdivisions built mostly between the late 1970s and the mid-1990s. That means a large share of the housing stock is now 30 to 45 years old - and original concrete flatwork, patio slabs, and any wood decking from that era is at or past its expected service life. Clay soils throughout the Inland Empire expand when wet and contract when dry, a cycle that stresses footings and can cause posts to shift if they were not set deep enough when first installed. The older the original installation, the more likely it is that this movement has already shown up as cracks, lean, or settlement.
Summer temperatures in Rancho Cucamonga regularly reach 95 to 105 degrees Fahrenheit, and the city averages around 287 sunny days per year. That kind of sustained UV exposure degrades wood finishes faster than in coastal cities - a deck that would hold its stain for five years in Los Angeles might need attention in two or three years here. On top of the heat, Santa Ana wind events that blow through the foothills every fall and winter can gust above 60 mph. Any pergola, patio cover, or fence that is not anchored to handle wind loading is a liability once those winds arrive. The foothills neighborhoods near Alta Loma and Etiwanda are particularly exposed due to their proximity to the mountain passes where these winds funnel through.
Our crew works throughout Rancho Cucamonga regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect deck builder work here. We pull permits directly through the City of Rancho Cucamonga Building and Safety Services Division and have processed permits for homes in the planned tracts along Foothill Boulevard as well as larger-lot properties up near the foothills.
The city covers a wide range of terrain and housing types. Homes in the southern parts near the I-10 and I-15 interchange tend to be on standard-size lots with similar-style construction. Head north toward Alta Loma and Etiwanda and the lots get larger, the trees get older, and the homes were often built earlier - some dating to the 1960s. Victoria Gardens sits near the center of the city and is one of the most-recognized landmarks in the entire Inland Empire. Cucamonga Peak rises directly above the northern edge of the city and is the backdrop that most Rancho Cucamonga residents see every day.
We also serve homeowners in Moreno Valley and Ontario, so if you have family nearby in either city, we can help them too.
Call us or fill out the contact form and we will get back to you within 1 business day. You do not need to have a detailed plan ready - a rough idea of what you want and your address is enough to get started.
We visit the property, measure the space, and review the existing conditions including soil, drainage, and any existing structures. Your written estimate covers all materials and labor with no surprise charges - we discuss cost and options before you commit to anything.
We file permit applications with the City of Rancho Cucamonga and schedule the build once permits are approved. You do not need to be on-site for the full installation, though we coordinate with you at the start and keep you updated through the project.
When the work is done we do a final walkthrough with you to confirm everything meets the plan and passes inspection. We handle the final city inspection and give you the permit closeout documents to keep with your home records.
We serve all of Rancho Cucamonga - from the foothills near Alta Loma to the neighborhoods around Victoria Gardens. No pressure, no commitment required.
(951) 508-0140Rancho Cucamonga is one of the larger cities in San Bernardino County, with a population of around 177,000. The city was incorporated in 1977 and grew rapidly through master-planned subdivisions over the following two decades. The northern sections - historically known as Alta Loma and Etiwanda - were developed earlier and have larger lots, mature trees, and homes that date to the 1960s and early 1970s. The southern and central parts of the city are made up of the planned tracts built from the late 1970s through the 1990s, most of which sit on lots in the 6,000 to 10,000 square-foot range. Nearly 65 percent of housing units in Rancho Cucamonga are owner-occupied, which means most homeowners here have long-term stakes in their properties. The city is home to Victoria Gardens, one of the most-visited open-air shopping and entertainment centers in the entire Inland Empire.
Cucamonga Peak rises directly above the northern edge of the city and is the defining backdrop for the Alta Loma and Etiwanda neighborhoods. Historic Route 66 runs through the city along Foothill Boulevard, and the city recognizes this connection with local signage and a visitor experience along the corridor. The city has Metrolink commuter rail service and sits along both the I-10 and I-15 freeways, making it a hub for commuters across the region. We also work with homeowners in nearby Chino Hills and Jurupa Valley, both within easy reach of Rancho Cucamonga.
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Learn MoreCall Complete Corona Deck & Fence today or request a free estimate online. We respond within 1 business day and serve all of Rancho Cucamonga.