City Of Industry, CA Furnace & Air Conditioning Installation, Repair & Maintenance

Granger's Air Conditioning & Heating Inc. is proud to serve the City Of Industry community!

We are proud to be part of this community, serving your heating and air conditioning needs. Whether you need repair, replacement or a new installation of a furnace, air conditioner, heat pump or air filtration system, we get the job right the first time. Our certified technicians service all furnace and air conditioning make and models.

Please call us today at 626-484-7199 to consult with our home comfort specialist.

About City Of Industry, CA - Happy to be your hometown Heating & Air Conditioning Contractor!

City of industry has an unusual name and a fascinating, special history.  So much of the community has been commemorated at the Homestead Museum as well as other privately owned homes and museums. It is an exceptional walk through SoCal history that you can’t get anywhere else.  You can spend days just strolling in the beautiful sunny, weather and taking in history.  It’s so special for this reason.

The Homestead Museum includes two historic homes, a private cemetery, public gallery, and lush greens on the estate. It was once part of the Rancho la Puente. The history of the site starts with William and Nicolasa Workman who migrated to the area from Taos, New Mexico. In the mid-19th century, Workman and his friend John Rowland led one of the initial groups of colonists to the area and once they were contracted a piece of acreage, they quickly established themselves as cow farmers. It was, indeed, fertile land. However, Workman began growing wheat and grapes for wine production after severe weather conditions made the land unsuitable for cattle farming. He was extraordinarily successful in this industry, as well.  But, he lost everything due to some bad investments. His home was left empty.  Many years later, Workman’s' grandson Walter P. Temple made a lucrative oil discovery on the family property. He was very successful for a time until his business experienced a fate similar to that of his grandfather’s. His family also lost their wealth and were also forced to let go of the very same property.

Following their exodus, the estate was operated as a boy’s military school as well as a hospital before the City of Industry purchased the property and began efforts to return to the grounds in 1963 and a museum was opened to the public in May of 1981. Aside from visiting the homes, people can meander through the family's ancestral burial ground founded.  It’s a perfect way to spend a sunny Los Angeles. Walter P. Temple Memorial Mausoleum, completed circa 1920, contains many Workman and Temple family, friends, associates and affiliates as well as the last governor of Mexican California.  Needless to say, it is a prestigious and well-known group within the mausoleum and is an interesting building to tour.