
PatioLux Victorville Sunrooms builds custom sunrooms, four-season rooms, and patio enclosures throughout Rancho Cucamonga, CA. We carry a current California contractor license, manage all permits with the city, and design for the specific conditions of the Inland Empire foothills - including Santa Ana wind loads and the wide temperature swings that come with elevation.
We serve the full city, from the established neighborhoods near Victoria Gardens and along historic Route 66 to the larger foothills properties in Alta Loma and Etiwanda. Every project starts with a free on-site visit and a written estimate at no charge.

Rancho Cucamonga has a wide range of home styles - from 1970s ranch homes in the southern tracts to larger foothills properties in Alta Loma and Etiwanda with irregular lot shapes and mature trees. A custom sunroom design accounts for those differences rather than forcing a standard kit-room shape onto a site that does not fit it. See how we approach this on our custom sunrooms page to see how we approach custom design for sites like yours.
Rancho Cucamonga summers hit triple digits regularly and winter nights in the foothills can dip near freezing. A four-season room with insulated low-e glass and a proper HVAC connection stays comfortable at both extremes, which matters in a city where the temperature swings are larger than most Inland Empire residents expect.
Many Rancho Cucamonga homes from the 1980s and 1990s have a rear covered patio that catches western afternoon sun and becomes unusable from May through September. Enclosing that space with thermally broken glass walls creates a year-round room without requiring a full foundation pour, working with the structure already in place.
Homes in established Rancho Cucamonga neighborhoods near Victoria Gardens and along the Route 66 corridor have backyard space that could work harder for the household. A sunroom addition built on a new foundation turns unused yard into conditioned living space that stays on the city's permit record and adds to the appraised value of the home.
Rancho Cucamonga averages close to 290 sunny days per year, and that sustained UV exposure bleaches and degrades wood framing faster than in coastal California. Vinyl framing resists UV degradation, does not require painting or sealing, and holds its dimensions through the temperature swings that are normal in the Inland Empire.
Spring and fall in Rancho Cucamonga bring genuinely comfortable outdoor temperatures before summer heat sets in and after it fades. A screen room extends those usable months and keeps the space protected from insects without the cost or footprint of a fully enclosed addition - a good fit for foothills homeowners who want outdoor connection with some shelter.
Rancho Cucamonga was incorporated in 1977 and grew quickly through master-planned subdivisions built mostly between the late 1970s and mid-1990s. A large share of the city's housing stock is now 30 to 45 years old, which means original concrete slabs, aging stucco, and older attachment points that need assessment before a new room is added to them. The foothills neighborhoods - Alta Loma and Etiwanda - have homes from even earlier, some pre-dating the city's incorporation, with larger lots and more varied terrain. Both eras of housing have specific structural considerations that affect how a sunroom is designed and attached.
The climate adds another layer of complexity. Rancho Cucamonga averages close to 290 sunny days per year, with summer highs regularly reaching 100 degrees and above. The foothills neighborhoods sit at elevations where Santa Ana winds accelerate through the mountain passes and can gust above 60 mph in fall and winter. Clay soils beneath many of the older neighborhoods expand and contract with seasonal moisture, causing the concrete cracking and uneven patio slabs that are common throughout the city. A sunroom contractor who works in Rancho Cucamonga regularly accounts for all three of those factors - heat, wind, and soil movement - in the design rather than treating them as edge cases.
Our crew works throughout Rancho Cucamonga regularly, and we pull permits from the City of Rancho Cucamonga Building and Safety Services department. We are familiar with the plan check process here, the documentation the city requires for a residential room addition, and the typical timelines from submittal through approved permit. Many neighborhoods in Rancho Cucamonga - particularly in the planned communities around Victoria Gardens and the Etiwanda area - also have active HOAs with their own architectural review processes, and we routinely prepare and submit the documentation those committees need as part of our standard project scope.
Rancho Cucamonga occupies a distinct position geographically. The city runs from the I-10 corridor in the south up to the base of the San Gabriel Mountains in the north, with Cucamonga Peak visible from almost anywhere in the city. The northern foothills neighborhoods - historically Alta Loma and Etiwanda - have a different character than the newer tracts near Haven Avenue and the 15 freeway. We also regularly work in nearby Upland, which borders Rancho Cucamonga to the west and has a similar mix of older and newer housing stock.
The homes near the Route 66 corridor along Foothill Boulevard represent yet another distinct building era - some of the oldest in the city, with more varied construction details than the 1980s subdivisions to the north and east. We have worked on all of these property types and bring the same approach: assess what is actually there before drawing up a design.
We respond within 1 business day. We ask a few quick questions about your home, your lot, and how you plan to use the new space so we can set up a focused site visit and bring the right information to the conversation.
We come to your Rancho Cucamonga home, measure the target area, check the existing patio or foundation condition, and review your setback situation. You leave with a clear understanding of cost and scope - the written estimate follows within one to two days at no charge.
We prepare the drawings and submit the permit application to the City of Rancho Cucamonga Building and Safety Services. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we provide the documentation the architectural committee needs. Plan check typically takes three to five weeks.
Once permits are in hand, we build on the agreed schedule. A city inspector visits at each required milestone, and at completion we walk through the finished room with you and hand over all signed permit paperwork for your records.
We serve Rancho Cucamonga and surrounding Inland Empire communities. The site visit and written estimate are free - no commitment required.
(442) 219-3813Rancho Cucamonga is one of the larger cities in San Bernardino County, with a population of around 177,000, and it sits at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains along the I-10 and I-15 freeways. The city was incorporated in 1977 and grew quickly through master-planned residential development. The northern sections - historically known as Alta Loma and Etiwanda - predate the city itself and have a more rural character with larger lots, mature trees, and some horse properties. Victoria Gardens, the large open-air shopping and dining center in the heart of the city, is a regional gathering point that draws visitors from across the Inland Empire. The city also celebrates its connection to historic Route 66, which runs through the city along Foothill Boulevard and anchors some of the older neighborhoods near the city center.
Most of the housing stock dates from the late 1970s through mid-1990s, with a large proportion of owner-occupied single-family homes on lots of 6,000 to 10,000 square feet. That age range means a significant share of homes are now entering the period where original exterior finishes, concrete flatwork, and attached structures need attention. We serve homeowners throughout all parts of the city, and we also work regularly in neighboring Ontario, which borders Rancho Cucamonga to the south and shares similar climate conditions and housing stock from the same era.
Every project we build runs under a current California contractor license you can verify at any time through the California Contractors State License Board. We share the license number openly - it is the first thing a careful Rancho Cucamonga homeowner should confirm before signing with any contractor.
The foothills neighborhoods - Alta Loma and Etiwanda - have larger lots, older trees, irregular terrain, and homes that pre-date the city's 1977 incorporation. Those sites need different design thinking than the 1980s and 1990s tract homes in the flatter southern parts of Rancho Cucamonga. We have worked in both areas and design accordingly.
The site visit and written estimate are free and come with no pressure to move forward. You can take the number, compare it against other bids, and decide on your own timeline. We do not use expiring offers or high-pressure scheduling tactics.
We handle the complete permit process with the City of Rancho Cucamonga - drawings, submittal, inspection scheduling, and final sign-off. You receive the completed permit paperwork at job close. Every room we build is on the city's record and fully documented.
A verifiable license, foothills-specific design experience, and a permit process we manage from start to finish are concrete things you can confirm before signing. We let those facts carry the conversation rather than relying on vague assurances.
Stylish patio covers that provide shade and extend outdoor living.
Learn MoreWe serve Rancho Cucamonga and all surrounding Inland Empire communities. The site visit and written estimate are free - and there is no pressure to commit.