
RG San Carlos Fence serves Mountain View homeowners with chain link, wood, vinyl, privacy, and security fence installations. We know the clay soils, the compact ranch-home lots near Castro Street, and the Mountain View permit process - and we respond to every new inquiry within one business day.

Mountain View is a city of mid-century ranch homes on modest lots with clay soils beneath them. The services below reflect what those conditions actually require.
Mountain View's compact lots and working-class roots mean chain link has been the go-to enclosure option here for decades - and it remains one of the most cost-effective ways to define a property line or contain pets. Our chain link fence installation service covers residential and commercial gauges, vinyl-coated finishes, and slat privacy inserts for homeowners who want a cleaner look.
The 1950s and 1960s ranch homes that dominate Mountain View's neighborhoods look right with a cedar or redwood fence, and we build with both. Given the clay soils that shift seasonally underneath, we set every post in concrete - not packed soil - which makes the difference between a fence that lasts 20 years and one that starts leaning in five.
Mountain View lots are typically 5,000 to 7,000 square feet, and homes sit close together. A 6-foot privacy fence makes the backyard genuinely usable for a family or a dog without requiring a renovation. Board-on-board construction eliminates gaps that develop as wood dries in Mountain View's warm, dry summers.
Vinyl handles Mountain View's dry summers and occasional foggy mornings without warping, fading, or requiring repainting. For homeowners with high property values and no interest in regular maintenance, it is a practical long-term choice. It also resists the UV bleaching that shortens the life of untreated wood fences in the intense Bay Area sun.
Mountain View's dog-friendly culture - from the trails near Shoreline to the walking streets off Castro - means a lot of homeowners need a backyard that actually keeps a dog contained. We build pet-specific fence configurations with dig-guard extensions and reinforced gate hardware designed for dogs that push on fencing.
In Mountain View, where clay soil movement loosens posts over time, isolated post replacement is often all a fence needs rather than full replacement. We assess the entire fence line at the estimate visit and give you an honest recommendation. Catching a problem early in one section is always less expensive than waiting until it has spread.
Most of Mountain View's single-family homes were built between the late 1940s and the early 1970s - a postwar housing wave that produced thousands of ranch-style houses on lots of roughly 5,000 to 7,000 square feet. These homes were built quickly and economically, and many of the original fence installations, where they still exist, have reached or passed the end of their structural lifespan. The older wood fences in these neighborhoods are most commonly failing at the post base, where ground contact and seasonal soil movement have rotted or loosened the wood. The houses themselves are on concrete slab foundations, which means there is no basement or crawl space to notice problems below grade - fence post decay at ground level often goes unnoticed until the fence visibly leans or falls.
Mountain View sits on clay-heavy soils common to the Santa Clara Valley floor, which expand when saturated and contract during the dry season. This movement, repeated year after year, is one of the primary reasons fence posts loosen and fences begin to lean in this city. Concrete footings address the problem directly by anchoring posts below the clay layer and preventing the lateral movement that causes gradual loosening. For Mountain View homeowners replacing a fence that has already failed due to post movement, changing to concrete footings at the rebuild is the single most important upgrade available.
Our crew works throughout Mountain View regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Mountain View Community Development Department on fence and gate projects across the city. We know the current height limits for front-yard fences in the street setback, where the six-foot rear-yard maximum applies, and which project types require a permit versus which qualify as a repair exemption under the local code. Getting that determination right before we start saves the homeowner inspection delays and rework.
Mountain View has distinct neighborhoods worth knowing. The streets near Castro Street and the downtown core have older, denser blocks with homes sitting close to the sidewalk, and fence work there often involves navigating narrow side-yard access. The neighborhoods near Shoreline at Mountain View and the north part of the city are more spacious, with slightly larger lots and more room to work. Properties near the Googleplex corridor on the east side increasingly include newer townhome developments with different fence and gate requirements than the original ranch-home stock.
We also serve Sunnyvale, which borders Mountain View to the south and shares the same clay-soil conditions, and Palo Alto, which sits directly to the west. Homeowners near the city lines will find we serve their neighborhood without any extra travel charge.
Call or submit the contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We schedule on-site estimates at a time that works for you - you do not need to take time off work for an estimate visit.
We walk the property, check soil conditions and post depth on any existing fence, measure the project, and identify permit requirements. You receive a written, itemized estimate with no pressure to decide on the spot.
If the project requires a Mountain View building permit, we handle the application. Once the permit is approved - typically one to two weeks for residential fence work - we schedule the installation date and arrive on time with the crew and materials.
Most residential installations finish in one to two days. We remove all debris, old fence materials, and concrete spoil from post-hole digging before we leave. You are present for the estimate but do not need to be home during the installation itself.
We serve Mountain View homeowners from Castro Street to Shoreline. No obligations - just an honest assessment and a written price.
(650) 530-1397Mountain View is a city of about 82,000 people in Santa Clara County, situated between Palo Alto to the west and Sunnyvale to the east. The city is perhaps best known as the home of Google's headquarters, but its residential character is that of a mid-century Peninsula city - ranch homes on modest lots, tree-lined streets, and a walkable downtown centered on Castro Street. The city has a diverse housing mix ranging from original 1950s bungalows near downtown to newer townhome developments near Shoreline Boulevard and the north end of the city.
Mountain View's residential neighborhoods vary in character. The streets close to downtown and Castro Street are the oldest, with smaller lots and a denser feel. Further out toward Shoreline at Mountain View, the city opens up into larger parks, the amphitheater, and some of the newer mixed-use development that has reshaped the area over the past decade. The city's El Camino Real corridor is a shared artery with neighboring Palo Alto to the west and Sunnyvale to the east, and homeowners across this stretch share the same soil conditions and seasonal weather patterns.
Durable chain link fencing for security and boundary definition.
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Learn MoreCall us today or submit a free estimate request. We serve Mountain View homeowners throughout the city and respond within one business day.