
Lake Elsinore Sunrooms & Patios builds four-season sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Murrieta homeowners - fully permitted, properly insulated, and designed to stay comfortable when temperatures hit triple digits.
Most homes here were built during Murrieta's rapid growth years and have backyards that deserve better than a slab that sits empty from June through September.

Murrieta summers regularly push into the mid-90s to low 100s, and a sunroom that is not properly insulated and cooled is unusable for months at a time. A four-season sunroom with high-performance glass and a dedicated cooling source keeps the room genuinely comfortable whether it is February or August.
Murrieta's tract-built homes - whether in California Oaks, Spencer's Crossing, or Greer Ranch - almost universally have concrete backyard patios that sit underused in the afternoon heat. Enclosing that existing slab turns it into a room that works.
Murrieta's mild winters make a three-season room a near-year-round investment. With temperatures rarely dropping below freezing, you gain ten to eleven months of comfortable use at a lower cost than a fully insulated four-season build.
The open space and hillside areas on Murrieta's eastern edge bring evening insects and dust that make open patios less enjoyable than they should be. A screen room blocks both while keeping the cross-breeze that makes spring and fall evenings so pleasant here.
Murrieta homes built in the 1990s and early 2000s are hitting the age where owners are ready to invest in real upgrades. A sunroom addition turns an underused backyard corner into square footage that shows up on your listing when you sell.
In Murrieta's dry inland climate, low-maintenance vinyl framing holds its appearance better than wood over years of intense sun exposure. Homeowners who want durability without regular painting or staining find vinyl the practical choice for this region.
Murrieta sits inland along Interstate 15 in southwest Riverside County, far enough from the coast that the marine layer that keeps San Diego cooler provides little relief here. Temperatures from June through September regularly reach the mid-90s and frequently push into the low 100s. A sunroom built without high-performance insulated glass and a properly sized cooling system will be uncomfortable for a large part of the year - and in a city where the median home value is well above the national average, that is not a trade-off most homeowners are willing to make.
The bulk of Murrieta's housing stock was built between the early 1990s and the late 2000s, which means most homes are between 15 and 35 years old. Original rooflines, existing patios, and typical tract-builder construction methods all affect how a sunroom attaches and what foundation approach makes the most sense. The clay-heavy expansive soils common throughout Riverside County also apply here - every wet winter followed by a dry summer puts cyclical stress on slabs and foundations. We account for these conditions before we pour a single yard of concrete.
Our crew works throughout Murrieta regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom work here. We submit permits to the City of Murrieta Community Development Department and are familiar with the typical review timeline and submittal requirements. Many of Murrieta's subdivisions - including neighborhoods near California Oaks Sports Park and the communities built along the I-15 corridor - were developed by the same large tract builders, which means consistent floor plans and rooflines that we have worked with many times.
HOA architectural review is a reality in most of Murrieta's established neighborhoods. Greer Ranch, Spencer's Crossing, and California Oaks all have active HOAs with specific guidelines about roofline style, exterior materials, and color. We prepare HOA submissions as a standard part of the project process, so homeowners do not have to navigate that review on their own.
Murrieta borders Temecula to the south and Wildomar to the north - both cities we serve regularly. Homeowners near the Murrieta-Temecula boundary often ask us which jurisdiction their permit needs to go through; the answer depends on your exact address, and we sort that out before any paperwork is submitted.
Get in touch by phone or the contact form. We ask about your space, how you plan to use it, and whether your community has an HOA. We respond within 1 business day.
We come to your Murrieta home, measure the space, check the foundation, and assess how the afternoon sun hits your yard - a factor that drives the glass and cooling choices for every project. You receive a written estimate before we leave.
We handle the permit application with the City of Murrieta's Community Development Department and prepare any HOA architectural review submission. Budget three to seven weeks for this combined process. We keep you updated throughout.
Work starts with foundation prep, then framing, glass, roofing, and electrical. City inspectors visit at key stages. We walk you through the completed room and hand over all permit and inspection documentation.
We serve all of Murrieta, from the neighborhoods near California Oaks Sports Park to the newer developments out toward the eastern hills. Call us or fill out the form and we will respond within 1 business day.
(951) 508-0102Murrieta is one of California's fastest-growing cities, with a population approaching 130,000 and a housing market built primarily on single-family detached homes. The city is made up of distinct planned communities, including Greer Ranch, Spencer's Crossing, and California Oaks, most of them developed by large tract builders during the 1990s and 2000s. Stucco exteriors and concrete tile roofs are on nearly every block. The city's schools rank among the best in Riverside County, and the presence of Loma Linda University Health brings a stable employment anchor. Residents tend to be long-term homeowners who take maintenance and improvement seriously - most moved here for more space and better value than coastal Southern California offers, and they have invested accordingly.
Interstate 15 runs straight through the city and connects Murrieta to San Diego to the south and the Inland Empire to the north. The area around California Oaks Sports Park is a well-known gathering point for families, and the neighborhoods to the east near open space and the foothills include newer developments with slightly larger lots. Murrieta's warm inland climate - noticeably hotter and drier than the coast - is the single biggest factor in how we approach every sunroom design here. We also serve homeowners in neighboring Temecula, which shares many of the same housing characteristics and climate conditions.
Bug-free outdoor living with professionally installed screen rooms.
Learn MoreCall Lake Elsinore Sunrooms and Patios for a free, no-pressure estimate. We know Murrieta's neighborhoods, its HOAs, and the inland heat that every sunroom here needs to be built for.