 | New Generation Flooring Owner:
Brian Belden License # 751565 |
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 | Tel: (619) 843-9405 Fax: (951) 244-7923 | |
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New Generation Flooring of Beaumont, 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.
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About Beaumont, Riverside County, CA |
Beaumont is a city in
Riverside
County, California, United States. The population was 11,384 at the
2000
census.
Geography
Beaumont is located at 33°55′27″N 116°58′25″W? / ?33.92417°N 116.97361°W? / 33.92417;
-116.97361 (33.924093, -116.973734).
Its neighboring city to the east is
Banning and to the
west is the city of
Calimesa.
According to the
United States
Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 27.2 square miles
(70.4 km²), of which, 27.2 square miles
(70.4 km²) of it is land and 0.04% is water.
Demographics
As of the census
of 2000, there were 11,384 people, 3,881 households, and 2,782 families
residing in the city. The
population density
was 418.9 people per square mile (161.8/km²). There were 4,258 housing
units at an average density of 156.7/sq mi (60.5/km²). The racial
makeup of the city was 68.09%
White,
2.91%
Black
or
African
American, 2.33%
Native
American, 1.66%
Asian,
0.07%
Pacific
Islander, 20.33% from
other
races, and 4.62% from two or more races.
Hispanic
or
Latino
of any race were 36.21% of the population.
There were 3,881 households, 42.6% of them with children under the age
of 18; 47.3% were married couples living together, 17.8% had a female
householder with no husband present, and 28.3% were non-families. Single
individuals made up 22.3% of all households, and 9.2% had someone living alone
who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.89 persons
and the average family size was 3.39.
In the city the population was spread out with 33.0% under the age of
18, 9.9% from 18 to 24, 29.1% from 25 to 44, 17.3% from 45 to 64, and 10.7% who
were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 30 years. For every 100
females there were 91.6 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there
were 88.1 males.
The median income for a household in the
city was $40,295 in 2007. Males had a median income of $30,829 versus $20,613
for females. The
per capita income for
the city was $14,141. About 17.8% of families and 20.2% of the population were
below the
poverty line, including
28.9% of those under age 18 and 10.3% of those age 65 or over.
Politics
In the
state
legislature Beaumont is located in the 37th
Senate
District, represented by
Republican
John J. Benoit, and in
the 65th
Assembly
District, represented by Republican
Paul Cook.
Federally, Beaumont is located in
California's
41st congressional district, which has a
Cook PVI of
R +9
and is represented by Republican
Jerry
Lewis.
History
A postcard of an early Beaumont luxury hotel
sitting within local plant life typical of the area .
During the early 1850s, many surveying parties passed through the
vicinity of present-day Beaumont in search of a pass that would connect the
east to the Pacific Ocean. The
San Gorgonio Pass was
discovered in 1853 by a surveying expedition under Lieutenant R.S. Williamson,
who was sent by the United States government. Its discovery enthralled many who
now saw connecting to the ocean a feasible measure and led to plans for
connecting a railway from the
Missouri River to the
Pacific. By the early 1860s the
Union Pacific
Railroad had laid tracks through the modern-day location of Beaumont. At
the summit of the pass, a site was founded and named Edgar Station after a
physician from one of the
original expedition parties. Edgar Station served as a rest stop for railway
travellers from the
Mojave Desert on their
way to the Los Angeles vicinity. Soon Edgar Station changed its name to San
Gorgonio, named by a real estate development company, and it gradually
attracted permanent residents.
The sleepy town of San Gorgonio became an incorporated
California city on November
18, 1912 and adopted its current name of Beaumont (French for "beautiful
mountain"). As of 1927, the town boasted a small population of 857 with five
churches, a
public library, a
bank, a
high
school, two local newspapers, several lumber yards, commercial packing
houses, and a dehydrating plant. The city was dubbed "the land of the big red
apple" by local
residents in its early years, being one of Riverside County's largest apple
growers. Apple plantations in and around the town expanded to a $200,000
industry by 1930. Beaumont saw a rise in visitors and residents as the
little-known nearby city of
Palm Springs
to the east grew to become a highly popular resort spot in the 1930s and after;
thus Beaumont followed suit and attempted to capitalize on the tourism by
establishing
guest ranches. According to
an early 1930s/1940s postcard, the Highland Springs Guest Ranch of Beaumont
offered its patrons
horseback riding,
tennis,
archery,
horseshoes,
swimming,
shuffle-board,
ping pong,
baseball,
ballroom dancing,
massage,
basketball, as well as a
place to spend the night.
During the
Cold War,
a
Lockheed rocket
test site was established just to the south, outside of the town, until it was
sold in January 2004. The site's use of toxic chemicals has
contaminated the water of
local streams, hurting efforts to establish a
wildlife preserve of
nearby scenic canyons. With the housing boom in the early decade, the
urban
sprawl reached the last remaining valleys of the
Inland
Empire. With Beaumont's close proximity to Los Angeles, various Southern
California residents flocked to the San Gorgonio Pass region for its low
housing cost, causing a 20% jump in the city's population, making it the
fastest growing city in the State.
This has concerned many local residents, who cite increasing student population
in schools, rising demand on the water supply and increasing traffic in and out
of the city on
Interstate
10 in both directions. A recent 2008 study by the
Public
Policy Institute of California noted that Beaumont and its surrounding
communities in the San Jacinto Valley have registered the highest population
growth throughout the sprawling Riverside County and the region is projected to
increase by 4.5% a year to 310,000 by 2015
.
The 1995 movie How to Make
an American Quilt filmed many of its driving scenes through Beaumont.
Local wildlife in the surrounding vicinity include
quail,
coyotes, and
foxes. Today the
town is home to many antique store establishments dating back several decades,
including the Nettie and Alice Museum of Hobbies and the modern-day Beaumont
Antique Mall. New
big box stores have recently
opened up in town, including a
Wal-Mart
Supercenter, a
Home Depot Home Improvement
Center,
Staple's,
Best Buy,
Bed, Bath, and
Beyond, Petco,
Ross,
Applebee's, and a
Panda Express.
The City is host to many new master planned communities as the city has
grown. Since growth from 2000 the following communities have been built: Oak
Valley Greens, Three Rings Ranch, Solera by Del Webb, Sun Dance, Tournament
Hills, and Fairway Canyon. All communities operate under strong HOAs which have
attracted many people from outside of the area to new quality developments
similar to that of Rancho Cucamonga and Orange County suburbs.
Public safety
The
California
Highway Patrol has a regional office on the Beaumont side of Highland
Springs Avenue (its jurisdiction goes from
Calimesa to the west to
Desert Hot Springs
to the east, as well as
Hemet and
San
Jacinto to the south). Beaumont has its own police department and contracts
for fire services with the Riverside County Fire Department through a
cooperative agreement with
Cal
Fire.
Miscellaneous
Beaumont is the childhood home of current
NASA Astronaut and
STS-118 crew
member
Tracy E. Caldwell
.
Another inhabitant of Beaumont is the
Esperanza Fire arson
Raymond Lee Oyler. Author Jessie Terwilliger also resides in Beaumont.
The Beaumont Chamber of Commerce in conjunction with Locally Owned
Businesses has just launched its Market Night ever Tuesday evening at 6pm.
Beaumont is known for being very proud of its local businesses and residents.
This Market Night is named appropriately to indicate so: S.L.O.B. Market Night
which stands for Support Locally Owned Businesses. More information on the
market night can be found at
Discover The Pass
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