
Poway Masonry brings masonry contractor services to Escondido, including stone masonry, retaining wall construction, and foundation repair - with a crew that understands the hillside lots, clay soils, and aging housing stock common throughout this city.

Escondido properties - especially on hillside lots and older agricultural parcels on the east side - are a natural fit for stone masonry work. Natural stone retaining walls, garden borders, and stone patios anchor graded slopes while adding lasting visual character that stucco and concrete cannot match.
Sloped lots throughout Escondido - from the hillside neighborhoods on the north and east edges of the city to older properties with graded yards - put real demand on retaining walls. We size and build walls to handle the lateral pressure from Escondido's clay soils, with drainage systems that prevent the buildup that causes walls to lean.
Escondido sits on a mix of clay-heavy fill and decomposed granite soils that shift with the wet-dry cycle each year. That seasonal movement is behind most of the foundation cracking we see on homes built in the 1950s through 1980s near the downtown core - and early repair keeps a manageable crack from becoming a structural problem.
Escondido's inland heat - regularly above 90 degrees in summer - dries out chimney mortar faster than in coastal communities. We inspect crowns, repoint deteriorated joints, and seal gaps before the winter rainy season arrives, which is exactly when water intrusion through failed chimney mortar becomes a problem.
Many Escondido homes built in the 1960s through 1980s now have brick and block walls with mortar joints that have reached the end of their useful life. Tuckpointing - removing failed mortar and packing fresh material into the joints - extends the life of these existing walls at a fraction of the cost of a full rebuild.
A large share of Escondido driveways were originally poured concrete slabs from the 1960s through 1980s - and many have not been touched since. The combination of Escondido's clay soils expanding and contracting with the seasons and decades of UV exposure leaves these slabs cracked, uneven, and overdue for replacement with interlocking pavers.
Escondido is one of the larger cities in inland San Diego County, and its housing stock spans a wide range of ages and conditions. Homes near the downtown core were often built before 1960 - craftsman bungalows and smaller ranch houses with original stucco, aging concrete flatwork, and masonry that has never been touched. Further out, large suburban tracts from the 1960s through 1980s are now 40 to 60 years old. Many of the driveways, patios, and retaining walls built in that era are overdue for professional attention. Escondido summers push temperatures into the 90s and occasionally past 100 degrees Fahrenheit - hotter than the coast - and that heat dries out mortar joints faster, fades concrete sealers, and accelerates deterioration on any surface facing south or west.
The clay-heavy soils found across much of Escondido add a constant variable. Clay swells when it absorbs water during the rainy season and shrinks when it dries in summer - and that movement cracks concrete slabs, pushes retaining walls out of alignment, and stresses foundations over time. This effect is most pronounced on hillside and semi-rural properties on the north and east edges of the city, where some lots sit on graded slopes that were once agricultural land. A masonry contractor who only works in flat coastal neighborhoods will underestimate what Escondido's terrain and soil conditions actually demand.
Our crew works throughout Escondido regularly, pulling permits through the City of Escondido Development Services Department for jobs that require them. We understand the range of conditions across Escondido's neighborhoods - from the older craftsman bungalows near Grape Day Park and the downtown historic district to the hillside parcels on the east side that were once part of avocado and citrus groves.
Interstate 15 is the main corridor we use to reach Escondido job sites, and we work on properties spread across the city - from neighborhoods near Lake Hodges on the southwestern edge to hillside homes on the north and east sides closer to the San Diego Zoo Safari Park in San Pasqual Valley. Escondido's mix of flat suburban blocks, semi-rural hillside parcels, and dense older neighborhoods near downtown means no two job sites look the same, and we adjust our approach accordingly.
We also serve homeowners in San Marcos, directly to the west, and Vista, which shares the same inland climate and aging housing conditions. Call us or submit a request and we will respond within one business day.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and we respond within one business day. We ask a few questions about your property and what you are seeing - that lets us arrive with the right materials and a realistic time estimate, not a guess.
We visit your Escondido property, assess the scope in person, and check whether the job requires a city permit. You get a written estimate before any work is discussed - cost anxiety is real, and we address it directly at this step.
Once you approve the estimate, we schedule around your availability. For mortar work in Escondido summers, we plan for early morning starts to avoid the heat of the day - fresh mortar drying too quickly in 95-degree temperatures weakens the bond.
When the job is done, we walk you through everything completed and explain what to expect during any curing period. The site is left clean - materials, debris, and staging equipment removed - before we leave.
We serve Escondido and the surrounding area. No obligation, no pressure - just a straight answer about your project.
(858) 269-6094Escondido is one of the largest cities in San Diego County, with a population of roughly 150,000 people spread across about 37 square miles about 30 miles north of downtown San Diego. The city covers a wide range of neighborhoods - from the older historic district and craftsman homes near Grape Day Park in the downtown core to newer master-planned communities on the south and west sides. The eastern and northern edges of the city blend residential neighborhoods with semi-rural parcels that were once avocado and citrus groves - properties with larger lots, graded slopes, and outdoor features that demand more from their masonry than a flat suburban lot would.
The housing stock tells a clear story of the city's growth: pre-1960 bungalows near downtown, large postwar ranch tracts from the 1960s through 1980s in the middle of the city, and newer HOA communities on the suburban edges. The Lake Hodges reservoir on the southwestern edge and the rolling hills surrounding the city give Escondido its character - and they also mean that sloped lots and drainage challenges are a fact of life for many homeowners here. We work throughout the city and serve neighboring communities including San Marcos to the west and Vista to the northwest.
Control erosion and define your landscape with a solid retaining wall.
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Learn MoreCall us or submit a request today and we will respond within one business day with a free, written estimate.