
Custom Yucaipa Sunrooms & Patios is a sunroom contractor serving Beaumont, CA, handling sunroom construction, patio enclosures, and all-season room additions on the city's post-2000 tract homes in communities like Sundance, Tournament Hills, and Fairway Canyon. We have served the Inland Empire since 2018 and file every permit with the City of Beaumont from application through final inspection.

Beaumont's fast growth means a large share of the housing stock is relatively new, but homes in Sundance and Tournament Hills that were built in the early 2000s are now old enough that homeowners are ready to invest in additions. Our sunroom construction work in Beaumont accounts for the wind loads specific to the San Gorgonio Pass, using heavier anchor connections and wind-rated glazing that standard Inland Empire specs do not always include.
The stucco tract homes throughout Beaumont's planned communities almost universally have rear concrete patios that get hammered by afternoon sun and seasonal winds. Enclosing the patio turns an underused slab into a usable room, and because the foundation is already in place, the project is generally faster and less expensive than a full room addition.
Beaumont gets real winter nights - freezing temperatures happen from December through February at 2,500 feet - and summers push well above 90 degrees Fahrenheit regularly. An all-season room with insulated framing, low-e glass, and HVAC integration is the right answer for Beaumont families who want a room they can actually use in January and July.
Larger homes in Fairway Canyon and the northern hillside subdivisions of Beaumont are a natural fit for a four season sunroom build, where the scope is bigger, the finishes are premium, and the new room is treated as true conditioned living space rather than a transitional enclosed porch. These builds integrate with the existing HVAC and meet HOA material standards where applicable.
Beaumont homeowners who want to extend their usable outdoor season without a full enclosure often start with a solid patio cover. A properly designed cover provides shade from the intense high-elevation sun and can be built to support a future enclosure without demolition, making it a useful first step for families who are not ready to commit to a full room yet.
The winds through the San Gorgonio Pass push dust, pollen, and debris across open patios for much of the year. A screened enclosure keeps wind-driven debris out while maintaining airflow, which is especially useful during the mild evenings that follow a wind event and during spring when pollen counts in this pass are high.
Beaumont has been one of the fastest-growing cities in California for the past two decades. Most of its housing stock was built between 2000 and 2020, which means a large share of homes are now hitting the 15-to-25-year mark where roofs, HVAC systems, and concrete flatwork need their first serious attention. These are stucco homes with tile roofs, built by national and regional tract builders to standard California specifications. The first-time maintenance needs are predictable, but the design details for an addition - setbacks, fire blocking, roof tie-in points - require a contractor who has worked these specific floorplans before.
The climate here is the other major factor. The San Gorgonio Pass creates some of the strongest sustained winds in Southern California, and those winds are not a seasonal curiosity - they affect how sunroom structures need to be anchored, what glazing standards are appropriate, and how the exterior finishes should be sealed to prevent water intrusion during wind-driven rain events. Beaumont also sits at 2,500 feet elevation, which means UV intensity is higher than at the coast, stucco cracks faster under freeze-thaw cycles, and any outdoor structure needs to be built to handle a real temperature swing, not just mild Southern California conditions.
Our crew works throughout Beaumont regularly, and we pull permits with the Beaumont Building and Safety Division for projects in the city's master-planned communities and the newer hillside subdivisions on the northern and eastern edges of town. Beaumont's planned neighborhoods each have their own HOA, and we are familiar with the exterior modification approval process that applies before a city permit can be filed in those communities.
If you live in Sundance, Tournament Hills, or Fairway Canyon, you already know the wind. It comes through the pass reliably, and anyone who has been here a few years has watched it do things to gutters, fences, and roof tiles. That is not background noise for a sunroom contractor - it is a structural design input. We use wind-rated connections at every anchor point and specify glazing that meets the load requirements for this corridor, not just standard residential code minimums.
We also serve neighboring Banning directly to the east and Calimesa to the west. Properties near either city boundary get the same wind and sun exposure as Beaumont proper, and we handle permit jurisdiction verification during the site visit.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we respond within one business day. We ask about your home, the patio or outdoor space involved, and whether your neighborhood has HOA requirements - all of which affect how the project gets started.
We visit your Beaumont property, inspect the existing patio slab or deck, check the attachment wall, assess setbacks and HOA rules, and note any wind or fire zone factors specific to your parcel. Cost is reviewed openly at this stage - no surprise charges after the contract is signed.
Where required, we prepare HOA submission materials - drawings, material samples, and specifications - before filing the city permit. The Beaumont Building and Safety Division permit review typically takes two to three weeks, and we handle all plan-checker communication on your behalf.
Most Beaumont sunroom and enclosure projects take three to five weeks to build. Required city inspections are scheduled at each milestone, and we walk through the completed room with you at the end. You receive all permit records and final inspection paperwork.
We work throughout Beaumont and understand the HOA process, the permit requirements, and the wind conditions that make construction here different from the rest of the Inland Empire. Call or submit your project online and we will get back to you within one business day.
(909) 679-6027Beaumont is a city in Riverside County that has grown from about 11,000 residents in 2000 to over 60,000 by the early 2020s - one of the fastest growth rates in California during that period. Almost all of that growth came from large master-planned housing developments built on the western, southern, and eastern edges of the city. Sundance, Tournament Hills, and Fairway Canyon are the communities that most Beaumont residents know by name, each with thousands of homes, parks, and HOA-managed amenities. The city sits at the western end of the San Gorgonio Pass at roughly 2,500 feet elevation, and the rows of wind turbines visible on the hills east of town along Interstate 10 are a landmark that says something honest about the local climate.
Most Beaumont households are owner-occupied, and a large share of residents commute to jobs in Riverside, the Inland Empire, or further west. Noble Creek Regional Park is a well-used community green space, and the city's proximity to the I-10 makes it a practical base for families who work elsewhere. The housing profile here is overwhelmingly single-family detached homes with stucco exteriors, tile roofs, and attached two-car garages - a very uniform building stock that means a contractor who knows these homes can move through the assessment and design phase quickly. Neighboring Banning to the east sits in the same pass and has similar wind and sun exposure, while Calimesa to the west has a more varied, hillside-oriented housing stock.
Beaumont homes deal with real wind, real heat, and HOA approval requirements that not every contractor is prepared for. Call us today and we will visit your property and walk you through exactly what the project involves.