We offer home renovation & general contracting services.

Kitchen Remodeling Livermore

Local Kitchen Renovation Specialists


Transform your kitchen with professional remodeling services from Creekside Pro Construction in Livermore. Call 925-445-7684 today!

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Advantages of Kitchen Remodeling

Elevate Your Kitchen Experience

  • Boost your home’s value with a stylish, modern kitchen. We are located in Alameda County.
  • Enjoy improved functionality and efficiency in your cooking space.
  • Customize your kitchen layout to fit your lifestyle needs.
  • Experience a straightforward renovation process with our skilled kitchen contractors.
  • Professional Kitchen Remodelers

    About Creekside Pro Construction


    At Creekside Pro Construction, we are proud to be the premier kitchen renovation contractors in Livermore, CA. Our team of kitchen remodelers combines extensive experience with a passion for transforming spaces. Whether you’re looking to update your kitchen layout or refresh your home’s aesthetic, we provide customized solutions to meet your needs. Trust us for an efficient and stress-free renovation process in Alameda County.

    Kitchen Remodeling Process

    Our Simple Three-Step Approach

  • Initial Consultation: Discuss your vision with our kitchen design specialists.
  • Design & Plan: Our team crafts a custom kitchen layout to suit your needs.
  • Execute & Enjoy: Skilled kitchen contractors bring your dream kitchen to life.
  • Value of Kitchen Renovation

    Why Choose Creekside Pro Construction?


    Kitchen remodeling is more than just updating a room; it’s about creating a space that enriches your daily life. At Creekside Pro Construction, we recognize the significance of a functional and beautiful kitchen. Our proficiency in kitchen layout redesign ensures that every detail of your renovation is handled with accuracy and care. Serving Livermore, CA, and surrounding areas in Alameda County, we are focused on providing outstanding kitchen remodeling services. Call us at 925-445-7684 to start your kitchen transformation today!

    View Our Kitchen Remodeling Services

    About Creekside Pro Construction

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    Before its incorporation in 1796 under the Franciscan Mission San Jose, located in what is now the southern part of Fremont, the Livermore area was home to some of the Ohlone (or Costanoan) native people. Each mission had two to three friars and a contingent of up to five soldiers to help keep order in the mission and to help control the natives. Like most indigenous people in California, the natives in the vicinity of Mission San Jose were mostly coerced into joining it, where they were taught Spanish, the Catholic religion, singing, construction, agricultural trades and herding-the Native Californian people originally had no agriculture and no domestic animals except dogs. Other tribes were coerced into other adjacent missions. The Mission Indians were restricted to the mission grounds where they lived in sexually segregated “barracks” that they built themselves with padre instruction. The population of all California missions plunged steeply as new diseases ravaged the Mission Indian populations-they had almost no immunity to these “new to them” diseases, and death rates over 50% were not uncommon.

    The Livermore-Amador Valley after 1800 to about 1837 was primarily used as grazing land for some of the Mission San Jose’s growing herds of mission cattle, sheep and horses. The herds grew wild with no fences and were culled about once a year for cow hides and tallow-essentially the only money-making products produced in California then. The dead animals were left to rot or feed the California grizzly bears which then roamed the region. The secularization and closure of the California missions, as demanded by the government of Mexico, from 1834 to 1837 transferred the land and property the missions claimed on the California coast (about 1,000,000 acres (400,000 ha) per mission) to about 600 extensive ranchos. After the missions were dissolved, most of the surviving Indians went to work on the new ranchos raising crops and herding animals where they were given room and board, a few clothes and usually no pay for the work they did-the same as they had had while working in the missions. Some Indians joined or re-joined some of the few surviving tribes.

    The about 48,000-acre (19,000 ha) Rancho Las Positas grant, which includes most of Livermore, was made to ranchers Robert Livermore and Jose Noriega in 1839. Most land grants were given with little or no cost to the recipients. Robert Livermore (1799-1858) was a British citizen who had jumped from a British merchant sailing ship stopping in Monterey, California, in 1822. He became a naturalized Mexican citizen who had converted to Catholicism in 1823 as was required for citizenship and legal residence. After working for a number of years as a majordomo (ranch foreman), Livermore married on 5 May 1838 the widow Maria Josefa de Jesus Higuera (1815-1879), daughter of Jose Loreto Higuera, grantee of Rancho Los Tularcitos, at the Mission San José. Livermore, after he got his rancho in 1839, was as interested in viticulture and horticulture as he was in cattle and horses, despite the fact that about the only source of income was the sale of cow hides and tallow. In the early 1840s he moved his family to the Livermore valley to his new rancho as the second non-Indian family to settle in the Livermore valley area, and after building a home he was the first in the area in 1846 to direct the planting of vineyards and orchards of pears and olives. Typical of most early rancho dwellings, the first building on his ranch was an adobe on Las Positas Creek near the western end of today’s Las Positas Road. After the Americans took control of California in 1847 and gold was discovered in 1848, he started making money by selling California longhorn cattle to the thousands of hungry California Gold Rush miners who soon arrived. The non-Indian population skyrocketed, and cattle were suddenly worth much more than the $1.00-$3.00 their hides could bring. With his new wealth and with goods flooding into newly rich California, in 1849 Livermore bought a two-story “Around the Horn” disassembled house that had been shipped about 18,000 miles (29,000 km) on a sailing ship around Cape Horn from the East Coast. It is believed to be the first wooden building in the Livermore Tri-Valley.

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