
ViewPoint Moreno Valley Sunrooms builds sunroom additions, custom sunrooms, and patio enclosures for Riverside homeowners, with licensed construction and free estimates answered within one business day.

Riverside has homes built across nearly every decade of the past century, from Craftsman bungalows near downtown to postwar ranch homes in Orangecrest. Our sunroom construction service is calibrated for this variety - we assess each home individually and build to current California code regardless of the age of the existing structure.
Many Riverside homes were built with modest square footage in mind, and families outgrow them quickly. A sunroom addition gives you a comfortable, permitted room that connects to your existing home and adds real value to the property without requiring you to move or undertake a full interior remodel.
Riverside sees temperatures above 100 degrees in summer and occasional frost in winter. A four-season sunroom with insulated glass and climate control makes the space genuinely usable in both extremes, turning what could be a seasonal room into one your family uses every day of the year.
Riverside backyards often have existing concrete patios that become too hot to use in summer without some form of enclosure or cover. Enclosing your patio with screens, glass panels, or a combination gives you a shaded, protected space that works during the shoulder seasons and through the mild winter months.
The Spanish Revival and Craftsman homes near downtown Riverside have distinct architectural styles that deserve a sunroom designed to complement rather than clash with the original structure. Custom sunrooms are built to your home's specific dimensions, roofline, and exterior finish so the addition looks intentional.
A patio cover is often the right first step before a full enclosure, providing immediate shade and weather protection for a Riverside backyard at a lower upfront cost. We install solid and lattice patio covers that can be upgraded to a full enclosure later if your needs or budget change.
Riverside has one of the most varied housing stocks in the Inland Empire. The city's oldest homes, some over a century old, sit just a few blocks from postwar ranch homes and 1990s subdivisions. That range matters for sunroom construction because an older home near the Wood Streets neighborhood requires very different planning than a stucco tract home in La Sierra. A contractor who understands how older California construction differs from newer tract-built homes will avoid the surprises that cause cost overruns and permit problems.
The Inland Empire heat is also a real design factor that affects which type of sunroom makes sense for a Riverside home. With summers regularly above 100 degrees and roughly 287 sunny days per year, a poorly insulated sunroom will be unusable for five months of the year. That is why the choice of glass, the roof structure, and the HVAC strategy all matter more in Riverside than they would in a cooler coastal city. Expansive clay soils across much of the area also affect how foundations and concrete slabs perform over time, which is relevant when adding a room that will bear structural load.
Our crew works in Riverside regularly and we pull permits through the City of Riverside Building and Safety Department for sunroom and enclosure projects. Riverside is the county seat of Riverside County, which means the city runs its own permit process with its own inspectors - separate from unincorporated areas of the county that go through a different process. We know the city's current requirements for sunroom additions, what documentation they need at submittal, and the typical inspection timeline so we can keep your project on schedule.
Riverside is a large and spread-out city. From the historic Mission Inn district near downtown to the neighborhoods of Orangecrest on the east side, properties here vary significantly in age, size, and style. We have worked on homes near UC Riverside, in the Wood Streets area, and in the outer residential neighborhoods along Arlington Avenue and Van Buren Boulevard. That geographic familiarity means we can give you a more accurate estimate from the start, because we already know what to expect from homes in different parts of the city.
We also serve the communities around Riverside, including Corona to the west and Moreno Valley to the east. If you are on the edge of Riverside or not sure whether your address falls within our service area, just call and we will let you know right away.
Call or fill out the contact form with a few details about your home and what you want to add. We will get back to you within one business day to schedule the estimate visit.
We come to your Riverside property, evaluate the space, review any setback or HOA requirements, and give you a written, itemized estimate. No pressure - you can take time to review it and compare your options.
Once you approve the estimate, we submit the permit application to the City of Riverside and put your project on the build schedule. Permit approval typically takes one to three weeks, depending on the complexity of the project.
Our crew completes the build and passes all required City of Riverside inspections. We walk through the finished room with you and address anything that needs adjustment before we call the job complete.
We build sunrooms, patio enclosures, and custom additions for homeowners across Riverside. Reach out today and we will have a free estimate in your hands within one business day.
Riverside is a city of about 320,000 people and the seat of Riverside County, one of the largest counties by area in the United States. The city was founded in the 1870s and grew through the citrus era, which left a legacy of older residential neighborhoods near downtown with Craftsman bungalows and Spanish Colonial Revival homes. Those historic streets, including the Wood Streets neighborhood, give Riverside an architectural character that few Inland Empire cities can match. Landmarks like the Mission Inn Hotel and Mount Rubidoux are known to residents across the region.
The rest of the city is more typical of postwar Southern California: ranch-style tract homes from the 1950s through 1970s in established neighborhoods, and larger two-story stucco homes in subdivisions like Orangecrest and La Sierra that were built from the 1980s onward. UC Riverside is one of the city's defining institutions and a major employer, located in the northeastern part of the city. About 54% of Riverside households are owner-occupied, which reflects a community of people invested in maintaining their properties. For homeowners in communities just west of Riverside, we also cover Corona, where many families are adding sunrooms and outdoor living spaces.
Riverside homeowners are adding rooms and reclaiming their outdoor space this season. Call ViewPoint Moreno Valley Sunrooms now and we will schedule your on-site estimate within one business day.