
GetItDone Claremont Concrete is a Concrete Contractor in Diamond Bar, CA, handling pool decks, driveway replacement, and retaining walls for homeowners throughout the city. We have served the eastern Los Angeles County area for years and respond to all new inquiries within one business day.

Diamond Bar has a high rate of single-family home ownership, and many of those homes have backyard pools on sloped lots that need proper deck drainage to prevent water from pooling or running toward the house. Our concrete pool deck services include broom-finish, exposed aggregate, and texture-coat options designed to stay slip-resistant through the hot summers and cool winters this area sees.
Many Diamond Bar properties sit on graded hillside lots where retaining walls hold back soil on terraced yards and steep driveways. Walls here need to be designed for the lateral soil load on sloped ground and built with proper drainage to handle winter runoff from the Pomona Valley foothills.
Most homes in Diamond Bar were built between the late 1960s and the 1980s, and original driveways from that era are now cracked, heaved by clay soil movement, or stained beyond repair. Sloped lots mean driveway replacements here require careful grading and drainage work so water does not sheet down the drive toward the street or the garage.
Diamond Bar homes have high median values and owners who invest in their properties, making backyard patio upgrades a common project here. We build patios that drain correctly off sloped lots, and we can match decorative finishes to pool decks or existing flatwork for a consistent look.
Hillside lots throughout Diamond Bar often need concrete steps to navigate grade changes in the yard or between the street and the front entry. Original steps on homes built in the 1970s and 1980s commonly show settlement and cracking from decades of clay soil movement beneath them.
Diamond Bar properties along tree-lined streets see sidewalk panels cracked or lifted by root systems that have had 40 to 50 years to grow under the slab. Los Angeles County may require homeowners to repair adjacent public walkway panels, and we handle the permits and inspections required for that work.
Diamond Bar sits in the Pomona Valley foothills of eastern Los Angeles County, right on the border with San Bernardino County. Much of the city is built on hilly terrain with sloped and terraced lots - flat properties are less common here than in neighboring valley cities. That hillside character shapes every concrete job. Driveways slope. Pool decks need drainage plans. Retaining walls carry soil loads from grades above. A contractor who works only on flat suburban lots will miss the grading and drainage details that make hillside concrete last.
The other major factor is the soil. Much of Diamond Bar sits on expansive clay that swells when winter rains saturate it and shrinks back under the summer sun, which reaches 95 to 100 degrees from June through September. That seasonal cycle puts concrete flatwork under stress from below every year. Homes built in the 1960s through the 1980s - the dominant housing stock in Diamond Bar - now have original concrete that has been through 40 to 60 years of that movement. The U.S. Geological Survey identifies expansive soils as one of the costliest geological hazards in the country - and Diamond Bar sits squarely in that zone.
Our crew works throughout Diamond Bar regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. Diamond Bar is an eastern Los Angeles County community that sits along the 57 and 60 freeways, making it easy to reach from our Claremont base. The city runs from flatter streets near the freeway corridors up into winding hillside roads around Summitridge Park and the Diamond Bar Center. Homes near the top of those ridges have steeper lot grades and more pronounced drainage challenges than properties closer to the valley floor.
The housing stock we encounter most in Diamond Bar is the ranch-style and traditional tract home built between the late 1960s and the 1980s. These homes have stucco exteriors, attached two-car garages, and often a pool in the back. At 40 to 60 years old, the original concrete throughout these properties is commonly at or past its useful life. We approach each site assessment by checking the subbase condition and soil compaction before recommending replacement versus repair, because a new slab poured over a compromised subbase will fail just as fast as the one it replaced.
Diamond Bar is bordered by Walnut, CA to the west, and both cities sit in the same eastern Los Angeles County zone. We serve homeowners throughout both cities and are familiar with Los Angeles County Building and Safety permit requirements that apply to this part of the region. Permit requirements here differ from those in cities with their own building departments, and knowing that distinction saves time on every job.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and describe what you need. We respond to all Diamond Bar inquiries within one business day and schedule on-site visits at your convenience.
We visit the property, assess the existing surface, subbase condition, and drainage situation - especially important on Diamond Bar hillside lots. You receive a written estimate with a full line-item breakdown before we discuss anything further, so there are no pricing surprises.
For jobs requiring an LA County Building and Safety permit, we handle the application and inspection scheduling. You do not need to visit any county office. Once permits are cleared, we schedule the pour and handle all forming, subbase preparation, and finishing.
We clean the site when the work is done, walk the job with you before we leave, and coordinate any final county inspections on permitted work. We also provide care instructions for the new concrete so you know when to seal it and what to watch for in the first few weeks.
We serve Diamond Bar homeowners from our Claremont base. Tell us what you need and we will get back to you within one business day.
(909) 788-2719Diamond Bar is an eastern Los Angeles County city of roughly 55,000 residents, incorporated in 1989 after decades as an unincorporated community. The city grew rapidly from the late 1960s through the 1980s, when cattle ranches were subdivided into the planned residential neighborhoods that still define the community today. The terrain is hilly throughout, and the city is defined by curving streets, terraced yards, and hillside homes with views across the Pomona Valley. The Diamond Bar community is known for its high homeownership rate and strong schools, including Diamond Bar High School, one of the top-ranked public high schools in California.
The housing stock is overwhelmingly single-family, owner-occupied, and built between 1965 and 1990. Ranch and traditional-style tract homes dominate, with stucco exteriors and attached garages. Home values have climbed steadily, with median values now in the $750,000 to $800,000 range, and long-term owners here are accustomed to maintaining their properties carefully. Neighbors include Chino, CA to the east and Rowland Heights to the west, and the 60 and 57 freeways intersect just south of the city center, connecting Diamond Bar to both Los Angeles and the Inland Empire.
Reinforced slab foundations poured for long-term structural support.
Learn MoreCommercial parking lots designed for high-traffic durability.
Learn MoreCall us today or submit the contact form. We serve Diamond Bar homeowners and respond within one business day.