
Custom Yucaipa Sunrooms & Patios is a sunroom contractor serving Loma Linda, CA, building sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and remodeling existing sunroom spaces on the compact single-family homes throughout this city. We have served the Inland Empire since 2018 and handle every permit through the City of Loma Linda so homeowners never have to navigate the process alone.

Loma Linda has a large share of postwar and mid-century single-family homes, many of which have older enclosed porches or sunrooms that were built without modern insulation or permits. Our sunroom remodeling service brings these existing spaces up to current code, replaces aging glass, and adds proper HVAC connections so the room is genuinely usable in Loma Linda summers.
Loma Linda lots are compact, which means there is often less yard to work with than in surrounding cities. We design sunroom additions that fit within the available footprint without crowding the yard or running afoul of setback requirements, making the most of modest lot sizes common throughout this city.
Many Loma Linda homes have rear patios that sit in direct afternoon sun, making them uncomfortable for most of the summer. Enclosing the patio transforms that dead space into a year-round room - shaded, weatherproof, and usable on the hot days when the open patio is not.
Loma Linda evenings from September through November are pleasant, but open patios collect debris after Santa Ana wind events. A screened enclosure lets residents enjoy cool evening air without insects or blowing material, at a lower cost than a fully enclosed addition.
The Inland Empire basin traps heat in summer and sees occasional frost in winter, meaning Loma Linda homeowners who want a room that performs in both seasons need insulated walls, low-e glass, and a dedicated heating and cooling source. A four season sunroom meets that bar and adds conditioned square footage to the home.
For Loma Linda homeowners who want shade and protection from afternoon sun without fully enclosing the space, a solid or lattice patio cover is a cost-effective first step. It makes the outdoor area functional during spring and fall while leaving the option open to enclose it later.
Most homes in Loma Linda were built between the 1950s and 1980s, during the period when the city grew alongside Loma Linda University. These are predominantly single-story ranch homes with stucco exteriors and modest lot sizes. At 40 to 70 years old, many of these homes have aging roof structures, outdated insulation, and foundations that have been through decades of the Inland Empire heat cycle. When we plan a sunroom addition on one of these properties, we assess the attachment wall carefully - a 1960s stucco ranch does not always have the structural header that a newer home would have at that same opening. Getting this right at the planning stage prevents costly corrections later.
The soil in parts of Loma Linda includes expansive clay that shifts seasonally, and the climate delivers both intense summer heat - regularly above 100 degrees Fahrenheit - and Santa Ana wind events each fall. A sunroom built in Loma Linda without accounting for these conditions will show gaps, cracked caulk, and glass seal failures within a few years. One designed with these stresses in mind, using proper footings and appropriate glazing, holds up for decades without issues.
Our crew works throughout Loma Linda regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The city covers roughly seven square miles, which means our teams can move between jobs efficiently - there are no long drives between neighborhoods, and we can schedule follow-up visits quickly when questions come up during construction.
We are familiar with the residential streets near Loma Linda University Medical Center, where a significant share of the housing consists of rental properties maintained by landlords serving hospital staff and students. We also work in the quieter single-family neighborhoods on the eastern and southern edges of the city, where owner-occupied homes are more common. The mix of owner-occupants and landlords means we often work on a range of project types - from a homeowner who wants to add square footage to their primary residence to a landlord who needs a damaged porch enclosure replaced quickly between tenants.
We also serve neighboring Highland to the north and Redlands to the east. If you live near either of those city boundaries, the permit jurisdiction will depend on your exact parcel, and we can sort that out during the initial site visit.
Call us or submit a message through our contact form. We respond within one business day, ask a few questions about your home and what you want to add, and schedule a site visit at a time that works for you.
We visit your Loma Linda property, inspect the attachment point and foundation, check your lot for setback requirements, and review the project scope with you. If your home's age raises any structural questions, we identify them here - not after work has started.
We prepare construction drawings and file them with the City of Loma Linda Building and Safety Division. Review typically takes two to four weeks, and we manage all communication with the plan checker so you do not have to track the process yourself.
With permits in hand, our crew begins work. City inspections happen at required milestones and we schedule them without disrupting your routine. We close out the project with a walkthrough and turn over all permit documents at completion.
We serve all Loma Linda neighborhoods. No pressure, no obligation - just a straightforward conversation about your project and what it would cost.
(909) 679-6027Loma Linda is a small city of roughly 24,000 residents in San Bernardino County, sitting on a hillside between Redlands and San Bernardino. The city was founded by Seventh-day Adventists in the early 1900s and has maintained that community identity ever since. It is internationally recognized as one of the world's five Blue Zones, places where residents live measurably longer than average. Loma Linda University Health is the city's dominant institution and largest employer, and the hospital and medical school campus shapes the character of the neighborhoods immediately surrounding it.
Residentially, Loma Linda is a dense Inland Empire suburb with compact lots and a housing stock built predominantly between the 1950s and 1980s. Ranch-style single-story homes are common throughout the city's residential neighborhoods, many of which sit on grid-style streets a short distance from the university campus. The city borders San Bernardino to the west and Redlands to the east. Homeowners near Hulda Crooks Park and the neighborhoods along Anderson Street represent the kind of long-term, owner-occupied properties where sunroom additions make the most sense.
Call today or request a free estimate online - we respond within one business day and can usually schedule a Loma Linda site visit within the week.