
ViewPoint Moreno Valley Sunrooms builds enclosed patio rooms, sunroom additions, and screen rooms for Hemet homeowners, with free estimates, licensed construction, and permit handling responded to within one business day.

Most Hemet homes have concrete slab patios that are unusable for half the year because of the heat and the occasional winter cold. Our enclosed patio rooms service adds walls, glazing, and a roof over your existing slab to create a protected, comfortable room without starting from scratch on a new foundation.
Hemet's spring and fall evenings are genuinely pleasant, but the insects and dust make sitting outside less enjoyable than it should be. A screen room on your backyard patio gives you fresh air and an open feeling while keeping the elements out, and it costs less than a fully enclosed sunroom - which makes it a practical fit for the budget-conscious homeowners common in this market.
The ranch-style homes throughout Hemet typically have covered or open rear patios with concrete slabs that are already solid starting points for a conversion. Converting an existing slab into a full sunroom costs less and causes less disruption than building a new addition from the ground up, which matters to Hemet homeowners who want the result without the hassle.
Hemet's elevation means the city gets real winters - temperatures below freezing happen - and brutal summers over 100 degrees. A four-season sunroom with insulated glass and a climate-control connection is the only option that stays comfortable every month of the year in this climate, and it adds permanent square footage to your home's value.
For Hemet homeowners who want to reduce outdoor heat and protect their patio slab without a full enclosure, a solid or insulated patio cover is an affordable first step. Patio covers also reduce the UV exposure that breaks down concrete and exterior finishes faster at Hemet's inland elevation, extending the life of what you already have.
Many Hemet homeowners have lived in their houses for decades and want to add a room without moving to a bigger house. A permitted sunroom addition increases your living space and adds value to a property that is already paid down, giving you more room to enjoy without the disruption of a full interior renovation.
Hemet is a city where most of the housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1990s, and a large share of those homes have concrete slab foundations, stucco exteriors, and backyard patios that have been through decades of intense sun exposure. A sunroom or patio enclosure that works well in coastal Southern California is not automatically the right specification for Hemet. The San Jacinto Valley sits at roughly 1,600 feet elevation, and the combination of summer heat that regularly exceeds 100 degrees, UV radiation that degrades materials faster than at sea level, and occasional winter nights below freezing requires a contractor who accounts for all three conditions in the materials and insulation they recommend.
The clay and sandy soils in the San Jacinto Valley also cause concrete slabs to shift and crack over time, especially during the wet-dry cycles of winter and summer. A contractor doing a patio enclosure needs to evaluate the existing slab condition carefully - cracks that look minor on the surface can indicate more significant movement underneath. Working on Hemet homes regularly means knowing what to look for and being honest with the homeowner about what the slab can support before a new room goes up.
Our crew works throughout Hemet regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The homes we see most often are the single-story ranch-style houses built from the 1970s through the 1990s - stucco over wood frame, concrete tile or asphalt shingle roofs, and slab foundations. We also work on the manufactured and mobile homes that make up a significant portion of the housing in Hemet, and we know which types of projects are feasible on those properties and which require additional structural review.
Hemet is anchored by landmarks most residents know well - Diamond Valley Lake to the south, the Ramona Pageant grounds in the hills above town, and Hemet Valley Mall as the central retail hub. We work in neighborhoods across the full city, from the older streets near downtown to the newer developments on the east side near Florida Avenue and beyond.
We also serve the surrounding cities. If you are in Murrieta to the southwest or in Perris to the north, we cover those areas too. Call us to confirm your address is in our service zone.
Reach us by phone or the contact form with your address and a brief description of what you want to build. We respond within one business day to schedule a time to visit.
We come to your Hemet property, inspect the existing patio or slab, review your setback distances and lot layout, and provide a written, itemized estimate at no charge. You get a clear price before any commitment.
Once you approve the estimate, we file the permit application with the City of Hemet and set your construction start date. Permit review in Hemet typically takes one to three weeks depending on scope.
Our crew completes the build and passes all required city inspections. We do a final walkthrough with you, address any items before we leave, and consider the job done only when you are satisfied.
We build enclosed patio rooms, screen rooms, and custom sunroom additions for homeowners across Hemet, CA. Free estimates, licensed work, and permit handling included.
Hemet is a city of about 90,000 residents in the San Jacinto Valley in Riverside County. The city has long been known as a retirement destination in Southern California, and a large share of residents are retirees, many of them on fixed incomes. That demographic is reflected in the housing stock - Hemet has more manufactured homes, mobile home parks, and age-restricted communities than most Inland Empire cities, alongside traditional single-family neighborhoods. Home values are well below the California statewide median, which draws first-time buyers and families from more expensive nearby cities. Most residents own their homes outright or with low remaining balances, and they have a direct stake in maintaining what they have built up.
The city is anchored by Diamond Valley Lake to the south - the largest lake in Southern California - and the Ramona Pageant grounds, where the country's longest-running outdoor play has been staged every spring since 1923. Major roads include Florida Avenue and State Route 74, which run through the commercial core of the city. Residents of Riverside and Temecula to the north and southwest use Hemet as a regional service hub, and the city has a self-contained feel compared to many bedroom communities in the Inland Empire.
Reach out today for a free, no-obligation estimate - our team is ready to visit your Hemet home and walk you through your options.