Property Damage Restoration Services in San Bernardino
24/7 Emergency Response: (951) 579-4096
Why San Bernardino Properties Call Superior Restoration
Superior Restoration serves the City of San Bernardino from our Lake Elsinore HQ at 532 3rd Street, roughly 38 miles north via I-15 and I-10. We do not have a GBP-verified office in San Bernardino County. We dispatch the central and eastern county from Lake Elsinore and the I-10 western corridor from our Anaheim office. Our IICRC-certified crews handle water, fire, mold, and reconstruction across the city, with truck-mounted extraction rigs, commercial drying equipment, and an in-house rebuild team.
Restoration Services We Provide in San Bernardino
San Bernardino calls us across the full damage stack. Slab leaks in 1960s tract homes between the 215 and Waterman Avenue. Water heater failures across the older neighborhoods now running 50 to 60 years on aging supply. Fire and smoke damage in foothill homes along Verdemont and Devore where the 2003 Old Fire’s burn scar still defines the wildland edge. Mold tucked behind drywall after weeks of a slow drip nobody noticed. Commercial restoration along Hospitality Lane. We handle all four damage categories plus the rebuild, with one project manager carrying the file from first response to final walkthrough.
Water Damage Restoration in San Bernardino
Galvanized supply lines fighting from the inside in 1950s and 1960s tract neighborhoods between the 215 freeway and Waterman Avenue. Original cast iron drains corroding and root-clogging on aging stock. Slab leaks across the post-1980s sections to the south. Storm runoff coming off the Cajon Pass corridor and through the city’s northern foothills during atmospheric river winters. Emergency extraction, structural drying, contents handling, and Category 3 sewage cleanup. Full failure-pattern detail and cost ranges are on our San Bernardino water damage restoration page.
Fire Damage Restoration in San Bernardino
Kitchen and appliance fires inside the home, garage and workshop fires in detached structures, and wildland-urban interface exposure in the city’s northern foothill neighborhoods. The 2003 Old Fire burned 91,281 acres across San Bernardino County and destroyed 993 homes in the San Bernardino-Devore-Crestline corridor (source: Cal OES). Verdemont and Devore sit at the southern edge of that burn scar, and ember-cast and defensible-space considerations remain part of the conversation for any address along the foothill line. The global fire damage restoration page covers our full process while the San Bernardino-specific fire page is in development.
Mold Remediation in San Bernardino
Mold colonies form within 24 to 48 hours of water exposure. In San Bernardino that window is shaped by inland-summer attic temperatures pushing past 110 degrees, by aging plumbing in the older neighborhoods that produces slow drips behind cabinet kicks and shower pans, and by hard-water deposits at fittings that mask the early visual cues of a leak. Testing, containment, HEPA air scrubbing, black mold removal, and post-remediation clearance follow IICRC S520 standards. The global mold remediation page covers the full scope.
Damage Reconstruction in San Bernardino
After mitigation comes rebuild. Drywall, flooring, cabinetry, paint, roof repair, sometimes a full tear-down and reframe. Our in-house crew carries CSLB License #983759 and handles the work other restoration companies subcontract out. Material matching across 1950s and 1960s stock is its own discipline. Reconstruction in WUI-exposed foothill addresses adds defensible-space considerations into the rebuild scope.
San Bernardino’s Restoration Risk Profile: 2003 Old Fire, Cajon Pass, and 1950s-1970s Aging Stock
San Bernardino is the historical and demographic anchor of the eastern Inland Empire, and its restoration profile reflects three pressures stacked together. A wildfire history that includes a destructive event at the city’s northern doorstep. The Cajon Pass corridor driving wildfire and storm exposure from the north. And a housing stock dominated by 1950s through 1970s tract construction now in its sixth decade.
The 2003 Old Fire is a defining event in the city’s wildfire profile. The fire burned 91,281 acres across San Bernardino County and destroyed 993 homes in the San Bernardino-Devore-Crestline corridor (source: Cal OES, public incident records). Northern San Bernardino sat at the southern edge of that burn, and Verdemont and Devore carry the wildland-urban interface exposure that comes with foothill addresses along a major historical burn scar. The Cajon Pass at the city’s northern edge is the major north-south corridor between the Inland Empire and the High Desert. Wildfire and storm activity in the Pass affects coverage timing and routing for any address north of Devore.
The 1950s through 1970s tract construction across neighborhoods between the 215 and Waterman Avenue dominates the city’s residential profile. Galvanized supply lines, original cast iron drains, raised wood foundations giving way to slab construction across the era. These homes are now 50 to 70 years old. Plumbing failures, original water heater failures (typically replaced once or twice in that span and now in another service window), and roof and ceiling damage all show up at scale. Cal State San Bernardino on the city’s north side shapes rental density. Hospitality Lane and Hospitality Plaza anchor major commercial restoration scope. Loma Linda University Medical Center sits at the city’s southern edge, and the medical-campus adjacency shapes senior-housing scoping along the south-side residential boundary. The 1962 Highland-area tract, the 2007 Verdemont infill, and the Hospitality Lane commercial property are three different jobs.
Response From Our Lake Elsinore Office
Our Lake Elsinore office sits at 532 3rd Street, roughly 38 miles north of central San Bernardino via Interstate 15 and Interstate 10. Drive time runs 45 to 55 minutes for most addresses depending on traffic and time of day. We do not have a GBP-verified office in San Bernardino County. We do have a two-office model that covers the central and eastern county from Lake Elsinore and the I-10 western corridor (Rancho Cucamonga, Ontario, Fontana) from our Anaheim office. Our trucks carry truck-mounted extractors, commercial air movers, dehumidifiers, HEPA scrubbers, thermal imaging cameras, moisture meters, and board-up materials, so mitigation starts on arrival rather than on a second trip. Call (951) 579-4096 any hour, any day. Nights, weekends, holidays.
Why San Bernardino Homeowners Choose Superior Restoration
16 Years Across Southern California. We have been restoring properties from Lake Elsinore, Murrieta, Anaheim, and San Diego offices since 2010. Two-office coverage of San Bernardino County is built into how we route calls.
IICRC Certified Firm. Every technician holds credentials from the Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification. Every job follows IICRC S500 (water) and S520 (mold) professional standards.
CSLB License #983759. Reconstruction work runs under our own California contractor license. No subcontracted handoffs between mitigation and rebuild crews.
367 Google Reviews at 4.9 Average. Across our four offices. Reputation built job by job over 16 years.
Wildfire-Aware Reconstruction. Verdemont and Devore addresses sit at the southern edge of the 2003 Old Fire burn scar. Reconstruction in WUI zones carries defensible-space and ember-resistance considerations we build into the rebuild scope.
One Company From Emergency to Rebuild. Extraction, drying, cleaning, mold remediation, and full reconstruction, all under one roof. The single biggest difference between us and a national franchise that stops at mitigation.
Common Questions About Restoration Services in San Bernardino
Which restoration service do I need first?
On most water and fire emergencies, mitigation comes first: extraction, drying, board-up, soot containment. Mold testing follows if water sat for more than 24 hours. Reconstruction is the final phase. Our intake team scopes the right entry point on the first call. The same company carries the file from first response through the final walkthrough.
How fast can you reach a San Bernardino address?
Our Lake Elsinore office at 532 3rd Street is roughly 38 miles from central San Bernardino via I-15 and I-10. Drive time runs 45 to 55 minutes depending on traffic. We dispatch 24 hours a day, seven days a week, holidays included. We do not have an in-county office. We tell you that on the first call.
Do you handle the insurance claim?
We document scope with photos, moisture maps, and a line-itemized estimate, then communicate directly with the carrier’s adjuster. We work with most major insurers across Southern California and have done so for 16 years. The deductible and any coverage gaps remain the homeowner’s responsibility, but the documentation, scoping calls, and adjuster communication are ours.
Contact Superior Restoration for San Bernardino Service
When water, fire, or mold damage hits your San Bernardino home or business, call our 24/7 line at (951) 579-4096 or contact us online.
Serving San Bernardino from our Lake Elsinore Office
Superior Restoration — 532 3rd Street, Lake Elsinore, CA 92530
(951) 579-4096
CSLB License #983759 | IICRC Certified Firm
Founded 2010 | Part of HighGround Restoration Group




