Premier Beaumont Fence & Deck serves Highland, CA homeowners with vinyl fence installation, deck construction, pergolas, and outdoor living work. We know the East Highland Ranch HOA process, we pull permits through the City of Highland, and we build for the wind and heat that foothill properties deal with every year.

Highland properties near the foothills face persistent wind, intense UV exposure, and expansive clay soils that work against wood fencing over time. Vinyl fence installation gives Highland homeowners a low-maintenance alternative that does not rot, splinter, or need painting - and holds up far better in this climate than untreated wood.
Many older Highland neighborhoods have wood fencing that dates back to the 1980s and 1990s - and at that age, posts are often loose and boards are cracking or bowing. A properly anchored replacement fence, built with deeper footings for the local clay soil, will outlast the original by decades.
East Highland Ranch lots tend to be larger than most of the surrounding area, and many homes have backyards that could support a substantial deck but have never had one. A custom-designed deck sized to the property and built for the local climate turns that underused space into something the family uses daily.
Highland summers regularly push above 100 degrees, and wood decks that are not sealed every few years degrade fast in that kind of sustained heat. Composite decking handles the Inland Empire climate without the ongoing maintenance cycle - no staining, no sealing, and no splinters for bare feet.
Highland afternoons are hot from late spring through early fall, and most backyards offer little shade. A pergola or attached patio cover extends the hours you can actually use your outdoor space - and in a neighborhood with larger lots like East Highland Ranch, a well-designed pergola adds visible appeal alongside the function.
Homes built throughout the 1980s and 1990s across Highland may have original wood decks that have not been properly maintained. Surface cracks, loose boards, and failing stain are common - and a timely repair and reseal job is far less expensive than a full deck replacement if the structure is still sound.
Highland sits at about 1,200 feet at the base of the San Bernardino Mountains, and the conditions there are distinct from the flat valley cities to the south. The foothills create wind tunnels that direct gusts through residential streets - particularly in the northern parts of the city near the national forest boundary. That persistent wind load is the primary reason fences in Highland fail faster than the manufacturer warranty suggests. Post footings need to be sized for the actual wind exposure on this property type, not just for minimum code.
The expansive clay soils common throughout the San Bernardino Valley also affect Highland. Clay soils swell when wet in winter and shrink when dry in summer, and that repeated movement loosens fence posts, shifts patio slabs, and stresses deck footings over time. A contractor who builds in this area accounts for that soil behavior by setting deeper footings and using appropriate hardware - rather than discovering the problem after the first wet season.
Our crew works throughout Highland regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Highland Community Development Department for fence and deck projects across the city. We are familiar with the city's plan check process, and we know what the inspectors look for at the footing stage - which matters more in Highland than in some other cities because of the soil conditions.
East Highland Ranch is a distinct neighborhood we work in often. The HOA there has an architectural review committee with specific guidelines on fence height, material, and color - requirements that go beyond basic city permit requirements. We prepare the HOA submission package and coordinate the approval timeline so it runs concurrently with city permit review rather than sequentially, which saves weeks on most projects. Homes in East Highland Ranch tend to be newer and larger than the rest of the city, and the backyards reflect that - larger project footprints and more involved designs.
Highland borders San Bernardino directly to the west, and we serve homeowners in both cities. If you are looking for a comparison on a project that spans the two areas or just need us on the San Bernardino side, we handle that work as well.
Tell us what you need - fence replacement, new deck, pergola, or something else - and mention whether your neighborhood has an HOA. We reply within one business day and schedule a site visit at your convenience.
We visit the property, measure the space, assess the soil and grade, and walk through material and design options with you. Cost ranges are discussed during this visit so there are no surprises when the written estimate arrives.
We file the permit application with the City of Highland and prepare any required HOA submission. For East Highland Ranch projects, we coordinate both timelines to avoid delays. City of Highland permit review typically takes two to three weeks.
Once permits are cleared, we schedule your start date and complete the work. A final walkthrough covers every detail before we leave - you do not sign off until everything is right.
We serve Highland, CA homeowners from East Highland Ranch to the neighborhoods near Base Line Street. Free estimates, no pressure, and replies within one business day.
(951) 574-0539Highland is a city of about 55,000 people in San Bernardino County, incorporated in 1987 and situated at the base of the San Bernardino Mountains at roughly 1,200 feet elevation. The city spans a mix of housing eras and types - older ranch-style homes near Base Line Street, mid-century neighborhoods in the central city, and the newer master-planned East Highland Ranch community to the east with its parks, trails, and strong HOA governance. You can read more about the city at the City of Highland website. The San Bernardino National Forest starts at the northern edge of the city, giving residents quick access to hiking and mountain recreation while also placing some properties in or near designated fire hazard severity zones.
The housing stock across Highland reflects that growth arc. Homes built from the 1970s through the early 2000s make up the bulk of the city, with most on mid-sized single-family lots with stucco exteriors and concrete or tile roofs. The East Highland Ranch area has newer, larger homes on somewhat bigger lots - properties that are more likely to support deck additions and larger outdoor living projects. Highland is bordered directly to the west by San Bernardino and to the south by Redlands, and we serve homeowners throughout all three cities.
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Learn MoreWhether you need a fence replacement, a new deck, or a covered patio, we serve Highland and the surrounding area. Call today - every estimate is free and comes with no obligation.