
PatioLux Victorville Sunrooms builds all-season rooms, patio enclosures, and sunroom additions throughout San Bernardino, CA. We hold a current California contractor license and serve homeowners across the city - from the foothill neighborhoods near Cal State San Bernardino to the older streets closer to downtown - with free on-site estimates and complete permit management included on every job.
San Bernardino has some of the most varied housing stock in the Inland Empire - homes dating from the early 1900s through the 2000s, sitting on lots with clay soil and concrete slab foundations that each tell a different story. We assess what is already there, specify glass designed for sustained summer heat, and build every room to the City of San Bernardino permit record.

San Bernardino summers regularly exceed 100 degrees and winter nights can drop near freezing in the foothill neighborhoods. An all-season room with insulated low-e glass and a proper HVAC connection stays comfortable through both extremes - a meaningfully different result from a basic three-season enclosure or screen room that only performs in mild weather. See the full scope of what this involves on our all season rooms page to see how we scope and price this type of project.
Many San Bernardino homes from the 1950s through 1970s have wide rear patios with existing concrete slabs and covered overhangs - a footprint already most of the way to an enclosed room. Converting that space uses existing structure and avoids a full foundation pour, which keeps costs lower while adding conditioned living space that works through the Inland Empire's demanding summer heat.
San Bernardino's single-family neighborhoods - particularly the mid-century ranch homes that dominate the central and southern parts of the city - typically have enough rear yard setback for a new sunroom addition. Adding conditioned living space to these homes increases their market value and functional square footage without the disruption of a full interior remodel.
San Bernardino's sustained UV exposure and high temperatures degrade wood framing faster than in coastal markets. Vinyl framing does not require painting or sealing between seasons, resists UV fading, and holds its shape through the temperature swings that are normal in the Inland Empire - a lower-maintenance choice for a city where summer can run five months with minimal rain.
San Bernardino's spring and fall have stretches of genuinely comfortable weather before summer heat arrives. A screen room keeps insects and Santa Ana wind debris out of the space during those months without the full cost of an enclosed addition - a practical option for homeowners who want outdoor connection with basic protection from the elements.
An exposed rear patio in San Bernardino becomes unusable from late May through September without overhead shade. A solid patio cover reduces surface temperatures on the slab and adjacent walls, extends the usable season through spring and fall, and can serve as the structural starting point for a future enclosure if you decide to fully enclose the space later.
San Bernardino is the county seat of San Bernardino County and one of the larger cities in the Inland Empire, with a housing stock that spans more than a century of construction. The oldest homes sit in the foothill neighborhoods to the north - some dating to the early 1900s with wood framing, mature landscaping, and original stucco that needs careful assessment before any new structure is attached. The mid-section of the city is dominated by postwar ranch houses built between the 1940s and 1970s on concrete slab foundations, with stucco exteriors and rear patios that represent the most common starting point for a sunroom project. Newer subdivisions on the edges of the city add a third layer: 1990s and 2000s construction with tile roofs, larger footprints, and some HOA oversight. Each era has different structural conditions, slab ages, and permit histories.
The climate adds significant pressure. San Bernardino sits in a valley that traps heat and regularly sustains temperatures above 100 degrees from June through September - with peaks that can approach 110 degrees during heat events. The city also sits at the foot of the San Bernardino Mountains, which affects local wind patterns and delivers occasional cold snaps in winter that can frost pipes and stress concrete in ways that flat-valley cities do not always experience. Santa Ana wind events arrive every fall and can cause debris impact, anchor stress, and rapid pressure changes that test the connections between any outdoor structure and the main house. Building a sunroom that performs well here means designing for the full range of these conditions, not just the pleasant months.
Our crew works throughout San Bernardino regularly, and we pull permits from the City of San Bernardino Building and Safety Division for residential sunroom and enclosure projects in this city. San Bernardino is the largest city by population in the county, and its permit office handles a high volume of residential work - submitting a complete, accurate application the first time matters here, because resubmittals add weeks to a timeline that is already measured in months from contract signing to final inspection. We know what the plan reviewers look for and how to prepare drawings that move through check without unnecessary back-and-forth.
The city covers a large geographic area, from the flatter central and southern neighborhoods near the I-10 and I-215 corridors up through the foothill areas that climb toward the San Bernardino National Forest. Historic Route 66 runs through the heart of the city, and the neighborhoods along that corridor have some of the oldest residential construction in San Bernardino - homes where we often encounter original stucco, aging drainage, and slab conditions that require careful assessment before enclosing an adjacent patio. The California State University, San Bernardino campus anchors the north side of the city and is a reference point for many of the foothill neighborhoods we work in regularly.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Redlands to the east and Rialto to the west, where we encounter similar Inland Empire conditions and permit requirements.
We respond within 1 business day. We ask about your existing outdoor space, how you want to use the new room, and whether there are HOA requirements in your neighborhood - so the on-site visit is focused from the start.
We come to your San Bernardino home, measure the target area, assess the slab or foundation, and review your setback situation. The written estimate follows within one to two business days at no charge, with no obligation to proceed.
We prepare drawings and submit the permit application to the San Bernardino Building and Safety Division. Plan check typically takes three to five weeks. We track status and respond to any review comments without requiring your involvement.
Once permits are approved, we build to the agreed schedule. A city inspector visits at each required phase. At project close, we walk through the finished room with you and deliver all signed permit paperwork for your records.
We serve San Bernardino homeowners with free on-site estimates, full permit management, and all-season room designs built for Inland Empire summers. No obligation - just a number.
(442) 219-3813San Bernardino is a city of about 222,000 people and the county seat of San Bernardino County - the largest county by area in the contiguous United States. The city sits at the base of the San Bernardino Mountains at elevations ranging from roughly 1,000 to 1,500 feet, with the mountains visible from nearly every neighborhood. The housing stock spans more than a century: older custom homes in the foothill neighborhoods to the north, mid-century single-story ranch homes that fill the city center, and newer subdivisions toward the edges of the city that were built from the 1990s onward. Major freeways including the I-10 and I-215 run through the city, and Historic Route 66 - with its connection to the original McDonald's and other landmarks - passes through the heart of downtown. You can read more about the city on the San Bernardino, California Wikipedia page.
The north side of San Bernardino, near California State University San Bernardino and the Arrowhead Farms area, has some of the most distinctive residential neighborhoods in the city - larger lots, older custom construction, and a proximity to the foothills that means slightly different weather patterns and drainage conditions compared to the flatter southern neighborhoods. Many residents in San Bernardino are long-term homeowners who have lived in the same house for decades, which means deferred maintenance and aging systems are common in the housing stock. We also work throughout nearby Fontana, where similar Inland Empire conditions apply.
Stylish patio covers that provide shade and extend outdoor living.
Learn MoreWe build all-season rooms, patio enclosures, and sunroom additions throughout San Bernardino. Call today or submit a request and we will respond within 1 business day.
Every project we build in San Bernardino runs under a current California contractor license you can verify through the California Contractors State License Board at any time. We share the license number upfront because that is the first thing any careful homeowner should confirm before signing a contract.
San Bernardino has a wide range of housing eras - from early-1900s custom homes in the foothill neighborhoods near Cal State San Bernardino to mid-century ranch homes closer to downtown, and newer subdivisions on the city's outskirts. Each era comes with different slab conditions, framing conventions, and permit requirements. We have worked in all of them.
The site visit and the written estimate are completely free. You can compare our number against other bids and take as long as you need. We do not use time-limited offers or pressure tactics. Our schedule fills through referrals from homeowners who were treated this way at every step.
We submit the application, track the plan check, schedule every required inspection, and hand you the final signed permit at project close. You never need to contact the San Bernardino Building and Safety Division yourself. Every room we build is documented on the public record.
San Bernardino homeowners face a demanding climate - extreme summer heat, clay soil movement, mountain wind patterns, and Santa Ana events every fall. We build every sunroom to perform through all of it, and we close every project with a permit on the city record so the work is fully documented for resale.