Revitalize your home with exterior painting by Creekside Pro Construction. Give your property an updated look today!
Trusted Painting Experts
At Creekside Pro Construction, we provide exterior painting services to homeowners in San Bruno, CA. Our skilled painters focus on using robust materials and techniques for a permanent polishment. As an established painting service in San Mateo County, our goal is to make your home both stunning and safe.
Our Painting Process
– Initial Consultation: Share your vision, and we’ll help you choose the right color schemes.
– Prepare and Protect: Prepare surfaces and safeguard surroundings for a perfect application.
– Paint and Perfect: Utilize fresh paints for an invigorating vibe.
Detailed Painting Services
Exterior painting does more than improve appearance. It adds a layer of protection to your home, defending against weather-related wear and tear. At Creekside Pro Construction, serving San Bruno, CA, and the surrounding areas in San Mateo County, we offer exterior painting and staining services. Our work helps maintain your home’s value and vibe over time. Ready to refresh your exterior? Call us at 925-445-7684 today!
San Bruno was the location of the Ohlone village Urebure. It was explored in November 1769 by a Spanish expedition led by Gaspar de Portolà. Later, more extensive explorations by Bruno de Heceta resulted in the naming of San Bruno Creek after St. Bruno of Cologne, the founder of a medieval monastic order. This creek apparently later gave its name to the community.
With the establishment of the San Francisco de Asís (St. Francis of Assisi) mission, much of the area became pasture for the mission livestock. Following the decline of the missions, the area became part of Rancho Buri Buri granted to José de la Cruz Sánchez, the eleventh Alcalde (mayor) of San Francisco. After Jose Antonio Sanchez died, his heirs divided the Rancho and sold it off. Dairy farms later became common in much of the area.
The city began as Clarks’s Station, a stop on the Butterfield Overland Mail stagecoach route, utilizing an inn built in 1849, which was initially called Thorp’s Place and later Uncle Tom’s Cabin or 14 Mile House. The inn was demolished in 1949 and replaced with a Lucky’s supermarket (now a Walgreens drugstore, on the corner of El Camino Real and Crystal Springs Avenue). Gus Jenevein (for whom Jenevein Avenue was named) built another landmark called San Bruno House, which burned several times and was not rebuilt after the third fire. A few homes and farms were developed in the area. The railroad between San Francisco and San Jose built a train station at San Bruno in the 1860s. The railroad eventually became part of the Southern Pacific system, which ran both passenger and freight trains on the line. Today it is known as Caltrain.
Learn more about San Bruno.