
Victorville Sunrooms & Patios provides sunroom contractor services in Wrightwood, specializing in four season sunrooms, insulated enclosures, and patio conversions engineered for 6,000-foot elevation. We reply within one business day.

Wrightwood gets genuine mountain snow every winter, and a four season sunroom gives you a fully insulated, heated room that stays comfortable regardless of what is happening outside. Our four season sunrooms are engineered with snow-load-rated frames and insulated glass designed for the freeze-thaw cycling at this elevation.
Wrightwood homes with older decks or patios often lose the outdoor connection when winter arrives. An all season room converts that unused space into a year-round living area that handles snow, cold, and the intense high-elevation UV without any structural compromise.
Many Wrightwood cabins and mountain homes were built without the extra square footage owners need today. A sunroom addition expands the livable footprint with a structure built to county code for this elevation, giving you a bright, insulated room that adds real value to a mountain property.
Open patios on Wrightwood homes become snowfields in winter and go unused for months. Enclosing a patio with insulated panels or tempered glass turns a seasonal space into a usable room that works during the ski season and through the summer when the mountain is full of visitors.
Wood decks at this elevation take a beating from UV, snow, and freeze-thaw cycles, and many Wrightwood decks are past their useful life. Converting a failing deck to a sunroom solves the maintenance problem and gives you protected living space at the same time, built on a foundation suited for the terrain.
Wrightwood vacation cabin owners often want a flexible room that feels open in summer but stays warm enough to use during ski weekends. Enclosed patio rooms with operable windows or sliding panels give part-time residents exactly that, with materials chosen for the mountain climate rather than the valley.
Wrightwood sits at about 6,000 feet in the San Gabriel Mountains, and that elevation changes everything about how a sunroom or enclosure needs to be designed and built. Snow loads here are real - the area averages around 60 inches of snow per year in heavier winters - and any roof structure, framing, or glazing system has to be engineered to carry that weight safely. Valley contractors who have never worked at elevation often undersize the structural components, and the problems show up fast when the first real winter arrives.
Beyond the snow, the freeze-thaw cycle hits hard every winter. Temperatures drop below freezing overnight and climb during the day, causing materials to expand and contract repeatedly. Seals fail. Frames crack. Glass units with inadequate thermal ratings fog up or delaminate within a few seasons. Combine that with the fact that UV radiation at 6,000 feet is significantly more intense than at sea level, and you have a climate that demands materials and installation practices built specifically for mountain conditions. A contractor who works primarily in the valley is not automatically equipped for Wrightwood.
Our crew works throughout Wrightwood regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Projects in this area pull permits through the San Bernardino County Land Use Services division, which has specific requirements for snow-load design at higher elevations - requirements that do not apply to valley projects and that we factor into every Wrightwood estimate.
Wrightwood is a compact mountain community built around Big Pines Highway, with homes ranging from small 1950s and 1960s cabins near the village to larger year-round residences up in the pines. Many properties sit on hillside or sloped lots, and a significant share of homes are part-time vacation cabins whose owners are not on site during the week. We build schedules and communication around that reality, not around assumptions that work for suburban tract homes.
We also serve the Adelanto area in the lower desert and work throughout the High Desert region, which means our crew is making the run up and down the mountain regularly. Getting materials to Wrightwood via Highway 2 takes planning, and we build that lead time into every project schedule. We also serve homeowners in Phelan on the way up, so scheduling a Wrightwood job alongside nearby High Desert work is something we do regularly.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will respond within one business day. We ask about your property, what you are hoping to build, and whether you are a full-time or part-time resident, so we can schedule the site visit on a day that works for you.
We drive up to your Wrightwood property, assess the lot, existing structure, and foundation options, and walk through the project with you in person. The estimate we provide is written and itemized - no surprise charges later - and we cover the permit fees and timeline at that meeting so you know the full cost before you decide.
We handle the San Bernardino County permit application, including the snow-load documentation required at this elevation. While the permit processes, we coordinate material delivery up Highway 2, accounting for the longer lead times that come with mountain access.
Most Wrightwood installations take one to three weeks on site. You do not need to be present every day, which matters for part-time cabin owners. We schedule the final walkthrough at your convenience and confirm that every component - seals, hardware, glazing - is ready for a Wrightwood winter.
We serve Wrightwood and the surrounding mountain communities. Call us or submit the form below and we will respond within one business day.
(442) 219-3082Wrightwood is an unincorporated community in San Bernardino County, tucked into the San Gabriel Mountains at about 6,000 feet elevation. The population of roughly 4,500 people is a mix of full-time mountain residents and part-time cabin owners who come up on weekends and during ski season at Mountain High Ski Resort, which sits just outside the village. The small downtown strip along Big Pines Highway - what locals call the village - has the coffee shops, restaurants, and hardware store that keep daily life running. Most properties are single-family wood-frame homes, many built between the 1950s and 1980s, with a good number of them on wooded or sloped lots that make every project a bit more involved than a flat valley job.
Wrightwood is not a suburb. It is a genuine mountain community where the homes reflect the terrain and the winters are real. The area draws residents from the broader High Desert region and from the San Gabriel Valley, and neighbors here look out for each other in a way that is typical of small mountain towns. We also work in nearby Apple Valley and throughout Hesperia, giving us a broad view of the different building conditions across the region - from the high desert floor to the mountain communities above it. More information about the community is available on the Wrightwood Chamber of Commerce website.
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Learn MoreCall us today or request a free estimate online - we reply within one business day and we make the drive to Wrightwood for every project.