
GetItDone Claremont Concrete is a Concrete Contractor in Chino, CA, handling concrete floor installation, driveway replacement, and patio construction for homeowners throughout the city. We have served the western Inland Empire for years and respond to all new project requests within one business day.

Many Chino homeowners are updating garages, workshops, and enclosed patios with finished concrete floors that are easy to clean and hold up to the demands of daily use. Our concrete floor installation work includes proper subbase preparation for clay soil conditions, correct mix design, and sealing options suited to the Inland Empire heat.
Most Chino homes were built in the 1980s through the 2000s, and original driveways from those tract developments are now 20 to 40 years old. The expansive clay soil under most Chino properties is the primary cause of driveway cracking, and replacement work here requires proper compaction and sometimes a moisture barrier before the new slab goes in.
Chino has a long outdoor season with mild winters and hot summers, and a concrete patio provides usable backyard space for most of the year. We pour patios to drain away from the house and size them to the yard layout, with finish options ranging from broom texture to exposed aggregate.
Chino properties with grade changes - common in newer developments where grading created level pads on sloped land - often need retaining walls to hold back soil and manage drainage. We design walls for the specific soil load and include drainage provisions to prevent hydrostatic pressure buildup behind the wall.
Chino sidewalks in older neighborhoods show the effects of clay soil movement - panels that have shifted, cracked, or settled at different elevations creating trip hazards. The city can require homeowners to repair the public sidewalk adjacent to their property, and we manage the permits and inspections involved.
Homeowners in Chino's planned communities and newer neighborhoods - including The Preserve - often want driveways and patios that stand out from the standard tract finish. Stamped concrete adds texture and color while keeping the durability of a concrete surface, and it holds up well in the hot, dry Inland Empire climate.
Chino grew rapidly from the 1980s through the 2000s as housing tracts replaced the dairy farms and open land that once defined the city. Most of the residential neighborhoods - from the older streets near downtown to the planned communities in the south near Chino Airport - sit on former agricultural land. That land includes significant amounts of expansive clay soil, which the California Geological Survey identifies as a major contributor to foundation and flatwork damage throughout the Inland Empire and San Bernardino County. Clay soils swell in winter rains and shrink in summer drought, and that repeated movement is the single most common reason concrete driveways, patios, and sidewalks crack in Chino over time.
Chino summers are significantly hotter than coastal Southern California, with daytime highs regularly hitting 95 to 105 degrees from June through September. That heat accelerates sealer breakdown on any decorated or coated concrete surface, making regular maintenance more important here than in cooler climates. Large tract neighborhoods where all the homes were built in the same few years also mean that many driveways, patios, and concrete flatwork across a neighborhood hit the end of their service life around the same time - so Chino has a steady volume of full replacement work, not just patching.
Our crew works throughout Chino regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. Chino sits near the intersection of the 60, 71, and 83 freeways in western San Bernardino County, well connected to Ontario, Pomona, and Rancho Cucamonga. The housing stock we encounter most often is the stucco tract home built between 1985 and 2005 - attached two-car garage, concrete driveway, block wall fencing, and a poured backyard patio that is now showing its age. These homes are on mid-size lots with standard suburban layouts, and the concrete flatwork is usually the first thing that needs significant attention once the home passes the 20-year mark.
The newer developments in south Chino, including the communities near Chino Airport and the planned neighborhoods that replaced former dairy operations, have their own concrete maintenance timeline. Homes in these areas were built in the 2000s and 2010s and are reaching the point where original driveways and outdoor concrete are showing clay-related cracking for the first time. We have worked on properties throughout south Chino and understand the specific grading and drainage patterns in those planned developments.
Chino sits between Pomona, CA to the north and Ontario to the east - two cities we also serve regularly. Homeowners along the border with Ontario often ask us to assess both properties in a single visit, and we are familiar with permit requirements and inspection processes at the City of Chino Community Development Department.
Call or use the online form to tell us what you need. We will get back to you within one business day to confirm details and schedule an on-site visit. You do not need to be home for the initial drive-by, but being present speeds things up.
We visit your Chino property to measure, probe the subgrade conditions, and assess any clay soil or drainage factors that will affect the job. You receive a written estimate covering all costs before you decide - no pressure to commit on the spot.
On jobs that require permits from the City of Chino, we handle all filings before work starts. We schedule pours to avoid the hottest part of summer when possible, since proper curing is critical in Inland Empire heat.
We complete the job, pass any required city inspections, and clean the site. Before leaving, we walk you through the finished work and give you a straightforward maintenance schedule - when to reseal and what to watch for as the concrete cures through the first wet season.
We serve Chino homeowners throughout the city - from the older neighborhoods near downtown to the newer communities in south Chino. Call or fill out the form and we will respond within one business day.
(909) 788-2719Chino is a city of about 90,000 residents in western San Bernardino County, situated in the western Inland Empire about 35 miles east of downtown Los Angeles. For most of the 20th century, Chino was primarily agricultural, known as one of California's largest dairy farming areas. Beginning in the 1980s, the city grew rapidly as residential and commercial development replaced the dairy operations, drawing families from more expensive parts of Los Angeles and Orange County looking for larger homes at lower prices. The result is a city made up largely of tract subdivisions built in waves from the early 1980s through the mid-2000s - neighborhoods where similar homes throughout each tract share similar maintenance timelines.
The southern part of Chino, near Chino Airport - also known as Cable Airport - includes some of the city's newer planned communities and larger residential properties. The Preserve at Chino is one of the best-known master-planned communities in the area, with thousands of homes built on former dairy land. Most of Chino's housing is detached single-family with stucco exteriors, tile roofs, and attached two-car garages - a standard Inland Empire profile that comes with concrete driveways, block wall fencing, and backyard patios. Chino is well connected by the 60, 71, and 83 freeways and borders Ontario, CA to the northeast and Chino Hills to the south.
Reinforced slab foundations poured for long-term structural support.
Learn MoreCommercial parking lots designed for high-traffic durability.
Learn MoreCall us today or submit your project online. We serve all Chino neighborhoods and respond within one business day - the sooner we see the site, the sooner we can give you a written estimate.