
ViewPoint Moreno Valley Sunrooms builds all-season rooms, sunroom additions, and patio enclosures for San Bernardino homeowners, with licensed construction, permit filing, and free estimates returned within one business day.

San Bernardino temperatures swing from 100-plus-degree summers to occasional winter freezes, which makes a three-season enclosure insufficient for most families. Our all season rooms are built with insulated glass, sealed framing, and climate-control compatibility so the space is comfortable in every month - not just the mild ones.
Many of the postwar ranch homes throughout San Bernardino were built in the 1950s and 1960s with modest square footage that no longer fits how families live today. A permitted sunroom addition connects to your existing home, adds real livable square footage, and increases the property's value without requiring you to uproot your household.
San Bernardino homes commonly have concrete slab back patios that are exposed to intense sun for most of the year. Enclosing that patio with glass panels and a solid or insulated roof converts it from an underused surface into a comfortable room, and the existing slab often serves as a ready foundation - reducing the cost of the conversion significantly.
The foothill neighborhoods in the northern part of San Bernardino - near California State University, San Bernardino, and the areas bordering the San Bernardino National Forest - have older custom homes with distinct rooflines and exterior finishes. A custom sunroom for one of these properties requires individual design rather than an off-the-shelf kit, and we build to match your home's existing architectural character.
Vinyl-framed sunrooms hold up well in San Bernardino's climate because vinyl does not rust, corrode, or require periodic repainting the way aluminum or wood-framed systems can. For homeowners who want a low-maintenance enclosure that looks clean for years, a vinyl sunroom is a practical choice given the UV exposure and temperature swings this area sees.
For San Bernardino homeowners who want more than a screen room but are not ready for a fully HVAC-connected addition, an enclosed patio room is a practical middle ground. These rooms use solid walls and glazed panels to block wind, dust, and debris - common issues near the Santa Ana wind corridors - while keeping the project cost and complexity lower than a full four-season build.
A large portion of San Bernardino's housing stock was built between the 1940s and 1980s - single-story ranch homes with stucco exteriors, concrete slab foundations, and systems that are now forty to eighty years old. Those homes have character and value, but they also have quirks. Slab foundations in this era were poured directly on the ground without the moisture barriers or rebar densities used in newer construction, and decades of soil movement from clay-rich ground have caused many slabs to develop cracks or settle unevenly. A sunroom attached to one of these homes needs a contractor who checks the existing structure carefully rather than assuming the slab is sound before attaching a room to it.
San Bernardino also sits in a valley that traps heat, and the Santa Ana winds that push through the area in fall and early winter create an additional challenge. A sunroom facing the wrong direction without proper overhang or shading can be overwhelmed by radiant heat in summer and rattled by wind pressure in the fall. Getting the orientation, glazing, and connection to the main structure right the first time matters more in San Bernardino than it would in a milder climate - and that requires real knowledge of how this city's weather behaves across the seasons.
Our crew works throughout San Bernardino regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The San Bernardino County Land Use Services Building and Safety Division handles permits for projects in unincorporated county areas, while the City of San Bernardino runs its own permit process for properties within city limits. We know which jurisdiction your address falls under and file with the correct office so there are no delays from a misfiled application.
San Bernardino is a large and geographically varied city. The older neighborhoods near historic Route 66 and the downtown core have homes from the 1940s and 1950s that show their age in the best way - solid wood framing and character you don't find in newer construction, but with foundations and exteriors that need a contractor who takes the time to evaluate them properly. The foothill neighborhoods to the north, near California State University, San Bernardino, have larger lots and older custom homes that sit at slightly higher elevations and deal with different wind exposure than the valley floor.
We also serve the cities directly adjacent to San Bernardino, including Redlands to the east and Fontana to the west. If your property is on the edge of the city or in an area where the jurisdiction is unclear, call us and we will sort it out quickly.
Call us or fill out the contact form with your address and a description of what you want to build or convert. We respond within one business day to arrange the estimate visit.
We visit your San Bernardino home, assess the existing structure and slab, check local setback rules, and provide a written, itemized estimate. We also flag any structural concerns from the existing home so there are no surprises during construction. No pressure, no obligation.
Once you approve the estimate, we file the permit application with the correct city or county office and schedule your build. Permit processing typically takes one to three weeks depending on project complexity and current volume at the building department.
Our crew completes construction and passes all required inspections. We walk through the finished room with you before closing out the job, and we address any items you want reviewed before we consider the project done.
We build all-season rooms, sunroom additions, and patio enclosures for homeowners throughout San Bernardino, CA. Licensed work, permit handling, and free written estimates included.
San Bernardino is one of the larger cities in the Inland Empire, with a population of roughly 222,000 and a broad geographic footprint stretching from the valley floor up into the foothills of the San Bernardino National Forest. The city is the county seat of San Bernardino County - the largest county by area in the contiguous United States - and it has served as a regional hub for transportation and commerce since the historic Route 66 era. Most of the residential neighborhoods consist of single-family homes built between the 1940s and 1980s, with the older postwar ranch-style properties concentrated near the city center and the larger custom homes sitting further north toward the foothills.
The residential character of San Bernardino varies noticeably from one part of the city to another. The older neighborhoods near downtown carry a sense of history - many of these streets were established before the freeways and have mature trees, wide yards, and homes with original architectural detail. The northern foothill neighborhoods near CSUSB have a different feel, with larger lots, elevation gain, and older homes that were built to take advantage of the mountain views. Property owners across the city are often long-term residents who have invested in maintaining their homes for decades. We also serve nearby Redlands, which borders San Bernardino to the east and shares a similar mix of older residential neighborhoods and homeowners who value quality work.
Call us today or send your details online - we reply within one business day with a free estimate and no-pressure guidance on the best option for your property.