
PatioLux Victorville Sunrooms builds patio enclosures, four-season sunrooms, and screen rooms throughout Adelanto, CA. We handle permits with the City of Adelanto, supply desert-rated materials, and manage every inspection from start to finish.
Most homes in Adelanto were built in the 1980s and 1990s, and many have a covered patio that is a strong starting point for an enclosure project. We carry a current California contractor license and serve Adelanto as part of our regular High Desert service area - the climate, the building stock, and the local permit process are all familiar to us.

Most Adelanto homes from the 1980s and 1990s have an attached patio with an existing concrete slab and roof cover already in place. Enclosing that structure with glass walls is a more cost-effective path to a new room than a full addition because the foundation work is already done. See our our patio enclosures page for details on how we approach these projects in the High Desert.
Adelanto summers push well past 100 degrees, and winter nights regularly drop below freezing. A three-season room will be unusable for four or five months out of the year here. A four-season room with insulated glass and a dedicated HVAC connection is the only type that stays comfortable year-round in the High Desert.
Spring winds in Adelanto carry fine desert dust and insects that make outdoor sitting miserable from February through May. A properly installed screen room solves both problems and is one of the more affordable options for homeowners who want more usable outdoor space without the full cost of an enclosed glass room.
High Desert UV at Adelanto's elevation degrades paint and wood faster than homeowners usually expect. Vinyl framing holds its shape and color under intense sun, does not need repainting or resealing, and is a practical long-term choice for a home that already sees a lot of exterior wear from the climate.
Some Adelanto properties have wood or composite decks that were built for outdoor use but go unoccupied most of the year because of the heat. Converting a deck to an enclosed sunroom often reuses the existing deck structure as the subfloor, which reduces the scope of foundation work and keeps the project cost down.
Adelanto homeowners who want a room that handles triple-digit summers and freezing winters equally well benefit from an all-season room with full insulation, thermally broken frames, and properly specified glass. These are built to the same standard as interior living space rather than a seasonal outdoor room.
Adelanto is at about 2,800 feet in the Mojave Desert, and the High Desert climate is different from what most California building contractors deal with day to day. Summers push regularly above 100 degrees, and winter nights can drop well below freezing - those conditions stress roofing, exterior walls, concrete, and glass specifications that are rated for gentler California climates. A patio enclosure or sunroom built here needs glass with a low solar heat gain coefficient to stay livable in July, and the framing and foundation need to tolerate the freeze-thaw cycles that occur on some nights from November through February.
The housing stock in Adelanto is mostly 1980s and 1990s tract construction - homes that were built quickly during the city's fast growth period and are now 30 to 40 years old. Stucco exteriors on homes that age often show cracking from years of temperature cycling, and the concrete slabs these homes sit on can shift as the flat desert soil drains poorly and changes volume with moisture. When we build onto one of these homes, we assess the existing stucco and slab condition as part of the site visit rather than assuming the structure is sound. Understanding what the existing home is actually dealing with is how a good estimate gets written - and how a finished room stays in good shape for decades.
Our crew works throughout Adelanto regularly, and we pull permits from the City of Adelanto Building and Safety Division. We are familiar with their plan check process, the residential permit requirements for room additions, and the typical timelines homeowners can expect before construction begins. Working with a contractor who already knows the local permit office saves time and prevents the delays that come from unfamiliarity with the process.
Adelanto sits just off Highway 395 with residential neighborhoods spread across a flat desert floor. The city borders Victorville to the east, and the areas near El Mirage Road to the west are among the most distinctive parts of town - locals know it as the edge of the community near the dry lakebed. The neighborhoods closer to Victorville Boulevard on the east side of the city have a higher density of the original 1980s and 1990s tract homes, and those are the properties where a covered patio conversion is almost always worth evaluating before committing to a larger addition project.
We serve Adelanto as part of a broader High Desert route that also covers Barstow to the northeast and Apple Valley to the east. All three communities share very similar desert climate conditions, and the work we do in one informs how we approach the others.
We respond within 1 business day. We ask a few brief questions about the space you have in mind and your existing patio or deck so we can schedule a site visit and come prepared.
We come to your home, measure the area, assess the existing slab or deck condition, and check the lot grade around the proposed site. You will have a clear picture of cost and timeline before we leave - written estimate arrives within one to two business days.
We prepare the drawings and submit the permit application to the City of Adelanto Building and Safety Division. Plan review in Adelanto typically takes two to five weeks. We track the permit process and notify you when the approval comes through so you know exactly when construction can begin.
Construction runs on the agreed schedule. City inspectors visit at required milestones - you do not need to be present for every inspection, but we recommend a final walkthrough with you at completion. We hand over all signed permit paperwork so you have a clean record for your home.
We serve Adelanto and the surrounding High Desert. Submit your details or call directly - we respond within 1 business day.
(442) 219-3813Adelanto is a city of around 38,000 people in San Bernardino County, located in the High Desert region of the Victor Valley at about 2,800 feet above sea level. The city incorporated in 1988 and grew rapidly through the late 1980s and 1990s as new subdivisions spread across the flat desert floor. That growth period produced most of the city's housing stock - single-family tract homes on modest lots, mostly built quickly and now between 30 and 40 years old. The City of Adelanto handles permitting for residential construction, and understanding that office is part of working in this community. The area has also grown as an industrial hub, with a visible warehouse and logistics corridor along Highway 395 that most residents pass regularly.
Adelanto borders Victorville to the east and sits close to the I-15 freeway corridor, which connects it to the broader Inland Empire to the south and to Las Vegas to the northeast. Most residents do their daily shopping in Victorville, and the two cities share a lot of the same community infrastructure. The residential neighborhoods closer to the city center along Adelanto Road and Barren Road are where the highest concentration of the original 1980s tract homes are found - homes that now frequently have aging covered patios and stucco walls that are good candidates for an enclosure project. Nearby Victorville is where we are headquartered, and the two cities are a short drive from each other - we work across both communities as a single service area.
Stylish patio covers that provide shade and extend outdoor living.
Learn MoreCall PatioLux or submit a request online. We cover Adelanto and the surrounding High Desert - a free written estimate is one call away.