
ViewPoint Moreno Valley Sunrooms remodels and builds sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Fontana homeowners, with licensed construction, free on-site estimates, and permit handling responded to within one business day.

Many Fontana homes built in the 1980s and 1990s have older sunrooms or patio enclosures that were put up quickly and never properly insulated - rooms that bake in summer and drafty in winter. Our sunroom remodeling service upgrades those existing rooms with new glazing, insulated panels, and proper weathersealing so they actually work in Fontana's climate extremes.
Fontana summers regularly hit above 100 degrees, and most backyards have concrete slabs sitting in full sun for months. Converting that exposed concrete into an enclosed patio room gives you a shaded, screened, and weather-protected space without the footprint of a full room addition - and it starts with the slab you already have.
Fontana's proximity to open terrain and the foothills means dust, dry debris, and insects blow into backyards regularly - especially during fall Santa Ana wind events. A screen room lets you enjoy the outdoor air and views without the mess, and it is a cost-effective option for homeowners who want outdoor living space but are not ready for a full glass enclosure.
Fontana sits in the Inland Empire, where summers are among the hottest in Southern California and winter nights can drop below freezing in the northern neighborhoods near the foothills. A four-season sunroom built with insulated glass and proper HVAC connection handles both extremes, giving you a room that is actually usable in August and in January.
An unshaded patio in Fontana is nearly unusable from June through September - the radiant heat from an exposed concrete slab makes it uncomfortable well before temperatures peak. A solid or insulated aluminum patio cover drops surface temperatures significantly and gives you shaded outdoor space immediately, with the option to add walls and glazing later.
Fontana has a large share of owner-occupied homes where families have settled in for the long term - and those households often need more dedicated living space than the original floor plan provides. A permitted sunroom addition creates a permanent room that adds real square footage, whether you need a home office, a playroom, or a year-round sitting area that connects you to the backyard.
Fontana's housing stock splits into two main waves - homes from the 1970s and 1980s in older neighborhoods near the city center, and a second batch of tract homes built in the late 1990s through mid-2000s in North Fontana. Both groups are now hitting the age where outdoor spaces, roofing, and exterior finishes need real attention. The older homes often have poorly insulated or aging enclosures that were built without today's energy standards, while the newer homes are just reaching the point where the original HVAC systems, stucco coatings, and concrete flatwork start to fail. A contractor who understands this split can give you an honest assessment of what your specific house actually needs.
Climate is the other major factor. Fontana summers push above 100 degrees for weeks at a time, and the city sits directly in the path of Santa Ana wind events that gust past 60 mph in fall and early winter. Any sunroom or patio enclosure here needs to be built for both extremes - heat-rejecting glazing and a sealed, properly anchored structure that will not leak or rattle when the Santa Ana conditions arrive. The expansive clay soils common throughout the Inland Empire also move seasonally, which means slab inspection before framing is not optional. Getting these details right from the start avoids the cost of structural corrections after the room is already built.
Our crew works throughout Fontana regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Fontana Building and Safety Division for projects here. The homes we encounter most often are the single-family ranch and tract styles that define most Fontana neighborhoods - stucco exteriors, two-car garages, and concrete backyard patios on lots that range from modest in older areas to larger in North Fontana's subdivisions built in the 1990s and early 2000s.
Fontana is a city people know by its major corridors and landmarks. The I-10 and I-15 freeways intersect near the southern part of the city, and the residential neighborhoods spread north toward the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. The Auto Club Speedway sits on the south end of the city and is a reference point most long-time residents know well. North Fontana's newer subdivisions - a short drive from Fontana Park and the city's aquatic center - represent the bulk of our sunroom and enclosure work in this part of the Inland Empire.
We also serve cities close to Fontana. If you are in San Bernardino to the east or in Rancho Cucamonga to the west, we cover those areas and can confirm your project qualifies.
Contact us by phone or form with your Fontana address and a short description of what you want to build or remodel. We respond within one business day to schedule your visit.
We visit your property, inspect the slab and any existing structure, check setback distances, and assess soil and drainage conditions. You receive a written, itemized estimate with a clear price and no obligation to proceed.
After you approve the estimate, we submit all permit paperwork to the City of Fontana and put you on the build schedule. Permit review in Fontana typically takes one to three weeks depending on project scope.
Our crew completes construction and passes all required Fontana building inspections. We do a final walkthrough with you, answer any questions, and leave you with documentation of the completed permitted work.
We serve homeowners throughout Fontana and the surrounding Inland Empire. Free estimates, licensed work, and no-pressure process.
Fontana is one of the largest cities in San Bernardino County, with a population of around 214,000 people. It grew rapidly from the 1970s through the early 2000s, which produced two distinct residential layers - older ranch-style homes near the city center and newer two-story tract homes in North Fontana. The city sits at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains, with elevations rising from around 1,000 feet near the I-10 to over 1,500 feet in the northern neighborhoods. The residential streets in North Fontana, developed mostly in the 1990s and early 2000s, have wide lots and newer infrastructure, while older sections near downtown have smaller homes that often need more extensive updating. Most Fontana homes are stucco-clad single-family houses with concrete backyard patios - exactly the housing type that benefits most from a quality patio enclosure or sunroom addition.
The city has a strong working-class identity and a high rate of homeownership - about 60% of housing units are owner-occupied, which means most residents have a real stake in maintaining and improving their properties. Fontana is also a major logistics hub, home to large distribution centers and freeway access points that make it a base for many Inland Empire households. Neighbors from San Bernardino to the east have called on us for the same services, and our work spans both cities and the communities in between.
Fontana homeowners are booking now. Contact us today and we will respond within one business day to schedule your on-site visit.