
San Bernardino Sunrooms & Patios is a sunroom contractor serving Loma Linda, CA with four season sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms - responding to every inquiry within one business day. We have served the Inland Empire since 2015 and understand the heat, clay soils, and mid-century housing stock that define this city.

Loma Linda summers regularly push past 95 degrees F, and a four season sunroom built with insulated glass and proper ventilation stays comfortable when an uninsulated room would be unusable. Learn more about our four season sunroom installations - designed specifically for Inland Empire heat.
Many Loma Linda homes have covered patios from the 1960s and 1970s that are solid structurally but open to the elements. Enclosing an existing patio is often the most cost-effective way to add a protected room without a full addition permit process. We enclose patios throughout Loma Linda, working around the modest lot sizes common in this city.
Loma Linda evenings in spring and fall are genuinely pleasant, and a screen room lets you enjoy them without insects or dust blowing in from the valley. Screen rooms are also the simplest permitted addition we install, making them a good starting point for homeowners who want to add outdoor living space without a large construction budget.
Vinyl frames hold up well in Loma Linda's UV-intense climate - they do not fade, warp, or need repainting the way wood frames do after years of Inland Empire summers. For homeowners near the university who want low-maintenance outdoor space, vinyl is a practical and durable choice that looks clean year after year.
Some Loma Linda homes already have older sunrooms or enclosed patios that were built decades ago with single-pane glass and minimal insulation. Upgrading those spaces with better glazing and proper sealing transforms them from uncomfortable seasonal rooms into livable space you can actually use in July. We assess the existing structure and tell you honestly what is worth keeping.
A solid patio cover does two things in Loma Linda: it protects you from direct sun during summer afternoons, and it gives you a foundation to work from if you ever want to convert the patio to an enclosed room. We install attached patio covers that match the roofline and exterior of your existing home so the addition looks intentional.
Loma Linda sits on the hillside between San Bernardino and Redlands, and the summers here are long and hot. Daytime highs reach the mid-90s regularly, with UV exposure that is noticeably more intense than coastal areas just 60 miles away. A sunroom that is not built with that heat in mind becomes unusable in summer - the single biggest complaint homeowners report about older or cheaply built enclosures in this area. Proper insulated glass, shade orientation, and ventilation are not optional extras here; they are what make the difference between a room you use daily and one you avoid from June through September.
Most of Loma Linda's residential neighborhoods were built between the 1950s and 1980s, and the city sits on soils that include expansive clay in several areas. Clay soil swells when it absorbs winter rain and shrinks when it dries out in summer - a cycle that shifts concrete footings and slabs over time. Any sunroom addition needs footings poured deep enough and reinforced appropriately for these soil conditions, or the room will show cracks within a few years. We design every foundation for the actual conditions of the lot, not a generic Southern California average. Fall Santa Ana winds - which regularly gust through the Inland Empire - also put stress on anything attached to the exterior of a home, making proper structural connections to the existing house a real engineering concern, not a formality.
Our crew works throughout Loma Linda regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The city covers only about 7 square miles, which means our team can move between jobs quickly and respond to schedules without long travel delays. We pull permits through the City of Loma Linda Building and Safety Division and are familiar with the review process for residential additions in this municipality.
Loma Linda is anchored by Loma Linda University Medical Center, one of the largest employers in the Inland Empire. That institution draws a steady population of medical professionals, researchers, and students, and many own or rent homes in the surrounding neighborhoods. Whether you own a ranch-style home near Hulda Crooks Park or a property closer to the university campus, we have worked on homes throughout the city and understand the mix of housing styles and lot configurations you find here.
When projects wrap up in Loma Linda, our team also serves Redlands to the east and Colton to the west - so if your neighbor or family member in those cities needs a sunroom contractor, we cover them too.
Call or submit a contact form and we will respond within one business day to schedule a free on-site assessment. You do not need to have a design ready - most homeowners just know they want more usable outdoor space.
We visit your Loma Linda property, measure the space, review the soil and foundation conditions, and discuss your goals. You receive a written estimate covering the full scope - no hidden costs added later - so you can make a decision without guessing at the final number.
We file all permit paperwork with the City of Loma Linda and schedule construction once approval is issued. Most sunroom additions take three to eight weeks on-site depending on size - we give you a realistic schedule at the start, not an optimistic one.
We schedule and pass the final inspection with the city, then walk through the completed room with you before we consider the job finished. Your addition goes on the official permit record of the home, which matters when it comes time to sell.
We serve Loma Linda and the surrounding Inland Empire. Fill out the form below or call us directly - we respond within one business day.
(909) 515-5768Loma Linda is a small city of about 24,000 residents in San Bernardino County, covering roughly 7 square miles along the I-10 corridor between San Bernardino and Redlands. The city was founded by Seventh-day Adventists in the early 1900s and is internationally recognized as one of the world's five "Blue Zones" - a designation tied to the Adventist community's lifestyle and the unusually high longevity of its residents. Loma Linda University Health, which operates the city's major hospital and medical school, is the dominant employer and shapes daily life throughout the community.
The residential neighborhoods closest to the university and along Anderson Street are a mix of mid-century ranch homes and newer apartment complexes built to house students and medical staff. About half of the city's housing is renter-occupied, which is higher than average for the Inland Empire. Owner-occupied homes are scattered throughout the city on modest lots, and the older ranch-style homes on grid streets make up the core of the single-family housing stock. Loma Linda borders San Bernardino to the west and is closely connected to Redlands to the east, and residents in all three cities regularly share contractors and service providers.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreTurn your underused deck into a comfortable, year-round sunroom.
Learn MoreFloor-to-ceiling glass rooms that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreWe serve Loma Linda and respond within one business day. Call now or submit a contact form to get started - no pressure, no obligation.