
Your old sunroom is too hot in summer, too drafty in winter, and not worth the energy bill. We rebuild it for the High Desert so it works every month - not just in October.

Sunroom remodeling in Victorville, CA means upgrading an existing enclosed porch or three-season room into a fully livable, year-round space - most projects take two to six weeks of active construction once permits are approved, covering new windows, insulation, flooring, and often heating and cooling.
A lot of Victorville homeowners bought their house with a sunroom already there, and that room has never really worked for the High Desert. The windows are single-pane, there is no insulation in the walls, and the space turns into an oven from June through September. A remodel fixes all of that - and it costs far less than tearing the room out and adding a new one. If you are starting from scratch rather than renovating, our sunroom design service covers new builds from the ground up with full custom specifications.
The goal is a room that feels like the rest of your house - comfortable in January and in July - not a space you avoid for half the year. That takes the right glass, the right insulation, and a contractor who understands what Victorville's climate actually demands.
If you stop using the room entirely when summer arrives, the space is not built for Victorville. A room that regularly hits 110 degrees inside is a wasted investment. Single-pane windows and uninsulated walls are the usual culprits, and they are both fixable. A proper remodel with low-e glass and insulated walls can drop the interior temperature dramatically, turning a dead room into one of the most comfortable spaces in your home.
If you are wiping fine grit off interior surfaces after a windy day, the window and wall seals have failed. In the High Desert, fine sand and dust finding their way inside through gaps around window frames or wall joints is especially common in homes built during Victorville's 1990s and early 2000s growth period. Once seals fail, the drafts and dust only get worse. This is one of the clearest signs your sunroom needs attention.
A floor that flexes when you walk on it, or has visible gaps between boards or tiles, is telling you the subfloor or foundation underneath has shifted or deteriorated. In Victorville, the desert soil can move seasonally, and older slabs sometimes crack or settle unevenly. A sunroom remodel is the right time to address this properly - waiting usually means higher costs later.
If the sunroom has mismatched flooring, outdated windows, or walls that clearly do not match the rest of the house, it is dragging down your home's value and your enjoyment of the space. Buyers in the Inland Empire notice when a room feels tacked on rather than integrated. A remodel that brings the space in line with the rest of your home adds real value at resale.
Every remodel starts with a site visit where we measure the existing space, assess the windows and walls, check the floor and foundation, and talk through how you want to use the room. From there we handle permit applications, demolition of whatever needs to go, and full installation of new windows, insulation, flooring, and any electrical or HVAC work. For homeowners in HOA communities, we prepare your architectural review package in parallel with the permit so you do not lose weeks waiting on two separate approvals. If you want to go further and build a screen-enclosed outdoor living area alongside the remodel, our screen room installation service covers that side of the project.
We walk you through a final punch list before closing out the job. You receive copies of all permit and inspection sign-offs - those documents stay with your home and protect you at sale or refinance.
Ideal for homeowners with an existing room that works in mild weather but becomes unusable in summer heat or winter cold - we add insulated walls, low-e glazing, and a mini-split HVAC so the space is comfortable year-round.
Best for rooms with functional walls and framing where the main issue is single-pane or failing windows - we specify low-e, double-pane glass with high-wind-rated frames built for the Victor Valley climate.
For rooms with soft subfloors, cracked tiles, or settled concrete, we address the structural issue before laying new flooring - because covering a bad floor does not fix it, and it costs more to redo it later.
For homeowners who want the sunroom to feel like a true part of the house - matching trim, consistent flooring, properly insulated walls, and finishes that photograph well for resale rather than looking like an afterthought.
Victorville sits at about 2,700 feet in the Mojave Desert, where summer highs regularly push past 100 degrees and winter nights can drop below 25 degrees. That temperature swing is wider than most of Southern California, and it is the main reason so many sunrooms here are effectively unusable for large portions of the year. Standard coastal construction standards do not apply. A room that would be fine in San Diego will be an oven in July and a refrigerator in December in Victorville. Every decision we make on a remodel - the glass specification, the insulation type, the HVAC sizing - is calibrated for what this specific climate demands. Homeowners in Barstow and the surrounding High Desert communities deal with the same conditions, and we have built for all of them.
The Victor Valley is also known for strong seasonal winds that carry fine sand and grit - conditions that degrade window seals and caulk faster than in sheltered coastal environments. We use commercial-grade sealants and specify windows rated for high-wind exposure as standard practice, because they hold up here in a way that standard-grade materials simply do not. Homeowners in Adelanto and nearby communities know this firsthand - one bad wind season can undo a poorly sealed remodel. We build it so that does not happen.
We will ask how big the space is, what is not working about it now, and what you want to use it for. You do not need to have all the answers - just describe what you are seeing and what you want. We reply to all inquiries within one business day.
We come to your home, measure the space, and look at the existing structure - windows, walls, floor, roofline, and how the room connects to the rest of the house. You receive a written, itemized estimate that breaks down labor and materials separately, not a single lump-sum number.
We file the permit application with the City of Victorville Building and Safety Division or San Bernardino County, depending on your address. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we flag that process at the estimate stage so you have time to get written approval before we apply for the permit. Plan for two to four weeks between permit application and construction start.
Once permits are in hand, we remove what needs to go, install new windows, insulation, flooring, and any HVAC or electrical work, and coordinate city or county inspections at the required stages. We do a final walkthrough with you before asking for the last payment, and hand you every permit sign-off document in writing.
Free estimate, no obligation. We handle permits, HOA submissions, and all construction from start to finish.
(442) 219-3082We have been remodeling sunrooms in the Victor Valley since 2020 and have worked in neighborhoods throughout Victorville and the surrounding High Desert. That means we know the local permit offices, the soil conditions, and the specific material choices that hold up here - not just what looks good on a spec sheet.
We specify low-e, double-pane glass and commercial-grade sealants rated for high-wind desert exposure as standard, not as upgrades. Many contractors use coastal California material specs in the High Desert - those choices degrade faster here, and you end up with a room that needs attention again within a few years. We build it right the first time for this specific climate. Energy Star-rated windows are the minimum we recommend for any Victorville remodel.
We handle the permit application with the City of Victorville and flag HOA requirements at the estimate stage so you have time to get written approval before permits are filed. Unpermitted remodels create disclosure problems at sale and void your homeowner's insurance coverage for that space - we never skip this step.
Every estimate we provide breaks out labor, materials, and permit fees separately. You see what you are paying for before you commit. If scope changes during the project, we discuss it with you in writing before any additional work begins - not after the invoice arrives.
Every one of these commitments comes back to the same idea: you should know exactly what you are getting, and it should hold up in the High Desert for years after we leave. That is the standard we hold ourselves to on every job.
Add a screened outdoor living space to your patio - a lighter-weight option that keeps bugs and desert dust out while preserving the open-air feel.
Learn MoreStarting fresh rather than remodeling? Our design service covers full custom specifications for new sunrooms built for the High Desert from day one.
Learn MoreCall us today for a free estimate - permit season fills up fast in the High Desert, and locking in your start date now means your room is ready before the heat arrives.