Faux Rocks

 
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contact-iconNew Generation Flooring
Owner: Brian Belden
License # 751565
  
contact-iconTel: (619) 843-9405
Fax: (951) 244-7923

New Generation Flooring of Anza, Riverside County, CA now offers Faux Rocks and Wall landscaping services!

Rock features are showing up everywhere. Why not add them to your repertoire? The world's great deposits of synthetic rock were once concentrated in zoos, theme parks and the occasional museum exhibit. But times have changed, and these days, faux rock is cropping up all over, from backyard pools and spas to shopping-mall waterfalls.

The demand for artificial rock is booming just about everywhere. Only in parts of Southern California has it peaked in popularity. But if someone wants to put in a sandstone waterfall, a lava-rock barbeque, or a granite grotto, why not use real rock? There are a number of reasons why faux is so popular.

  • Cost is one big factor. For the same money your customer might spend on a modest real-rock feature, they could have a mini Grand Canyon made with synthetic rock.
  • Weight is another consideration. Pool decks or other structures that would fail beneath the crushing weight of rock generally easily support faux.
  • When it comes to water features, which go hand in hand with rockwork, faux rock has no mortared joints to leak and seep like real rock features do.
  • Environmentally, faux eliminates the need to tear up to the earth to mine real rock.
  • It also offers versatility and ease of use that real rock can't touch. You don't need to bore holes through solid rock to hide the plumbing and electrical guts of a waterfall or hire a crane to hoist boulders into place.

Gallery




About Anza, Riverside County, CA


Anza is an unincorporated community located in southern Riverside County, California, United States, in the Anza Valley, a semi-arid region at a mean elevation of 4,110 feet (1,250 m) above sea level. It is located approximately 35 miles (56 km) southwest of Palm Springs, 143 miles (230 km) southeast of Los Angeles, California and approximately 75 miles (121 km) northeast of San Diego, California, being traversed by State Route 371.

In local vernacular Anza, and several other mountain communities (including Garner Valley, Idyllwild, Pinyon Pines and Aguanga) are collectively referred to as "the Hill". As of the 2000 census, the unincorporated town of Anza had a total population of approximately 2,100.

As of 2007, Anza's population is about 8,000 people. Since 2000, it has had a population growth of 25.74 percent.

The ZIP Code is 92539, and the community is inside area code 951.

Geography

Anza,is located at 33°33'17.14" North, 116°40'27.02" West .

Regional geographic subdivisions of the unincorporated town include Anza Valley and Cave Rocks (Central); Tripp Flats, Chandler Heights and Cahuilla (West) as well as Oak Spring, Burnt Spring and Heller Spring (East). The Anza Valley in which the unincorporated town is nestled is bordered by three significant mountains- Cahuilla Mountain to the West, Thomas Mountain to the northeast and Beauty Mountain to the southwest.

The area is characterized as high desert experiencing somewhat stronger temperature variations than those of the coastal cities, including sudden dips of temperature even on summer evenings, due to the high elevation. The Anza Trail originally travelled on horseback by Juan Bautista de Anza in 1774 through what was then referred to as the Cahuilla Valley, traverses the city from southeast to northwest.

Significant local landmarks include Saddleback Mountain with its characteristic triple peak located in the northwest of the city and bordered on the northwest by Tripp Flats and the South by Chandler Heights.

History

It is estimated that the Cahuilla aboriginal tribes inhabited an area including what is today the Anza Valley more than two thousand years ago and encountered Europeans only as late as 1774 when a Spanish expedition in search of an overland route from Sonora to Alta California made its way from Tubac, Sonora through the valley to Monterey, Alta California. That expedition was lead by Juan Bautista de Anza, in whose honour the valley was renamed from Cahuilla Valley to Anza Valley on 16 September 1926.

Up until about 1580 the area was in the proximity of a larger body of inland water known as Lake Cahuilla, but that inland lake larger than the current Salton Sea which occupies a portion of its former location evaporated, thus increasing the desert character of the Anza Valley. These climatic and cultural factors can be seen as having exercised a unique influence on the early European settlers of the Anza Valley. During the 1800s settlement included ranchers, a limited number of miners and honey producers. The mid to late 1800s witnessed moderate population and above average economic prosperity for this isolated community.

From the late 1860s on, Anza was largely settled by families seeking to build ranches under the Homestead Act. Of the homesteads in the area, one, the "Cary Ranch" on Cary Road (south of Anza, east of the Tripp Flatts Ranger Station) still exists and is still owned and occupied by family members of the original settlers. The ranch is now occupied by the Hopkins family. The Hopkins' are direct descendents of the Cary family. Although the Cary Ranch used to encompass hundreds of acres of land, most has been sold off only a 20-acre (81,000 m) parcel and several original buildings exist.

Already in the 1970s sales of property parcels and lots in Anza were promoted with particular emphasis on the proximity of this unspoiled countryside to larger coastal cities of southern California. Though perceived by outsiders as friendly and open to newcomers, Anza has been among those unique rural communities determined to systematically avoid the social and environmental problems of over-urbanization and since the 1980s this close-knit community has sought to preserve its unique artistic and creative culture by closely scrutinizing any development plans that could give rise to dysfunctions experienced in other regions of the state.

Culture

Due to its history and relative isolation for hundreds of years, Anza is dissimilar to many areas in California settled during the same period. The cultural identity of many long-time Anzans exhibits the marked influence of Cahuillan aboriginal culture on the White population, expressed in terms of art and folklore.

During the 1990s the city enjoyed an increasingly widespread reputation as a growing artists colony featuring newcomers from as far away as Europe. Common free-time activities include trail wandering, local historical activities and festivals as well as motorbiking and horseback riding along the Anza Trail. The Mountain Cahuilla operate a casino from their reservation on the southwestern edge of the city.

Every summer Anza has a parade to celebrate the Fourth of July. This is called "Anza Days" and it is a festival the whole town celebrates, and people travel miles each year to see it.

Anza also has a local gymkhana horseshowing circuit put on by the Lions Club six months out of the year. This is also a popular event the public enjoys.


 
 

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New Generation Flooring – (619) 843-9405
Serving all areas of San Diego and Southern California including the following neighborhoods:

Aguanga | Aliso Viejo | Anaheim | Angelus Oaks | Anza | Arcadia | Artesia | Atwood | Azusa | Baldwin Park | Banning | Beaumont | Big Bear City | Big Bear Lake | Bloomington | Blue Jay | Bonsal | Brea | Buena Park | Cabazon | Calimesa | Camp Pendleton | Capistrano Beach | Cardiff By The Sea | Carlsbad | Cathedral City | Cerritos | Chino | Chino Hills | City Of Industry | Claremont | Colton | Corona | Corona Del Mar | Costa Mesa | Covina | Crestline | Cypress | Dana Point | Desert Hot Springs | Diamond Bar | Duarte | El Monte | Encinitas | Escondido | Fallbrook | Fawnskin | Fontana | Foothill Ranch | Fountain Valley | Fullerton | Garden Grove | Glendora | Grand Terrace | Green Valley Lake | Hacienda Heights | Hawaiian Gardens | Hemet | Hesperia | Highland | Homeland | Huntington Beach | Idyllwild | Irvine | Julian | La Habra | La Mirada | La Palma | La Puente | La Verne | Ladera Ranch | Laguna Beach | Laguna Hills | Laguna Niguel | Laguna Woods | Lake Arrowhead | Lake Elsinore | Lake Forest | Lakewood | Landers | Loma Linda | Los Alamitos | Lytle Creek | March Air Reserve Base | Menifee | Mentone | Midway City | Mira Loma | Mission Viejo | Monrovia | Montclair | Moreno Valley | Morongo Valley | Mount Wilson | Mountain Center | Murrieta | Newport Beach | Newport Coast | Norco | Norwalk | Nuevo | Oceanside | Ontario | Orange | Pala | Palm Springs | Palomar Mountain | Perris | Pico Rivera | Placentia | Pomona | Poway | Ramona | Rancho Cucamonga | Rancho Mirage | Rancho Santa Fe | Rancho Santa Margarita | Redlands | Rialto | Riverside | Rosemead | Rowland Heights | Running Springs | San Bernardino | San Clemente | San Diego | San Dimas | San Jacinto | San Juan Capistrano | San Marcos | Santa Ana | Santa Fe Springs | Santa Ysabel | Seal Beach | Sierra Madre | Silverado | Solana Beach | Stanton | Sugarloaf | Sun City | Sunset Beach | Surfside | Temecula | Temple City | Trabuco Canyon | Tustin | Upland | Valley Center | Valyermo | Villa Park | Vista | Walnut | Warner Springs | Westminster | White Water | Whittier | Wildomar | Winchester | Wrightwood | Yorba Linda | Yucaipa | Yucca Valley

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