
Lake Elsinore Sunrooms & Patios builds custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and all-season rooms throughout Temecula, CA, handling HOA approvals and city permits for communities like Redhawk, Harveston, and Wolf Creek.
Every room we design here accounts for Temecula's 95-plus-degree summers, clay soils, and HOA architectural guidelines - so the finished product fits your property and holds up for years.

Temecula homeowners in master-planned communities often have specific HOA requirements on materials, colors, and roof lines. A fully custom sunroom is built to those specifications from the start, so the HOA review goes smoothly and the finished room matches the rest of the home.
Temecula's long, hot summers and mild but occasionally frosty winters mean a four-season room - with insulated glass and a dedicated cooling source - is the most useful option for homeowners who want to use the space year-round, not just in the shoulder seasons.
Many Temecula homes in neighborhoods like Paloma del Sol and Harveston have existing concrete patio slabs. Enclosing that slab is often the most cost-effective way to add a sunroom, using the existing foundation and saving weeks of concrete work.
Temecula's proximity to the surrounding hills puts some neighborhoods in seasonal wildfire smoke corridors. An all-season room with sealed glazing gives families a comfortable, clean-air space on days when outdoor air quality drops.
Homes near the vineyards and open land on Temecula's eastern edge deal with more insects and dust than city-center neighborhoods. A screen room lets you enjoy the valley breezes and hillside views without the grit and bugs that come with fully open patios.
Temecula's varied terrain - from flat Promenade-area lots to sloped hillside pads in Crowne Hill - means no two sunroom designs look the same here. We match the room's footprint, roofline, and orientation to the specific property before any plans are drawn.
Most of Temecula's housing was built between the early 1990s and the mid-2000s, which means a large share of homes are now 20 to 35 years old. At that age, original concrete patios are often cracking, outdoor caulk and seals have long since failed, and homeowners are starting to think about improvements that add real value. Temecula's high home-ownership rate and above-average household incomes mean these are homeowners who invest in their properties - and a permitted sunroom is one of the few improvements that adds actual square footage to a home's listed size.
The valley's expansive clay soils are a practical challenge that most homeowners don't think about until they see their patio slab cracking. That clay swells when wet in winter and shrinks back during the dry summer, and any foundation that doesn't account for that movement will show stress cracks within a few years. Add to that the HOA approval requirements that cover most of Temecula's neighborhoods, the seismic considerations that California building code requires for all room additions, and the need to design for summers that regularly push past 95 degrees - and you have a project that rewards hiring a contractor who has done this specific work in this specific city.
Our crew works throughout Temecula regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. A large share of the jobs we do in this city involve HOA-governed communities, so we know the architectural review processes for neighborhoods like Redhawk, Wolf Creek, and Paloma del Sol - including what the committees typically push back on and how to prepare a submission that moves through quickly. We pull permits through the City of Temecula Building and Safety Division and are familiar with current plan check timelines.
Temecula is a city of distinct neighborhoods spread across hilly terrain in the southern Riverside County valley. Homes near Old Town along Front Street have a different character than the newer subdivisions out in Crowne Hill or along Winchester Road near the Promenade. Hillside properties in areas like Morgan Hill and Crowne Hill sit on graded pads with retaining walls, which adds foundation considerations to any exterior project. Flat-lot homes in areas like Harveston are more straightforward but still need careful solar orientation planning given the valley's afternoon heat.
We also serve the cities that border Temecula. Homeowners in Murrieta to the north call us regularly, and we are equally at home working in the quieter neighborhoods of Menifee further up the valley.
Reach out by phone or the contact form and tell us about the space and how you plan to use it. We also ask whether your neighborhood is HOA-governed - most in Temecula are. We respond within 1 business day.
We visit your property, check the existing slab or yard, note the afternoon sun angle, and review any HOA guidelines for your community. You receive a written estimate with a full cost breakdown - no guesswork on your end.
We prepare and submit the HOA architectural review package, then handle the city permit application once HOA approval comes through. Combined, this process typically takes four to eight weeks in Temecula.
Construction begins with foundation or slab work, then framing, glazing, roofing, and electrical. City inspections happen at required milestones. We walk you through the finished room and hand over all permit and inspection documentation.
We work throughout Temecula - from Old Town neighborhoods to hillside communities in Crowne Hill. Call us or fill out the form and we will respond within 1 business day.
(951) 508-0102Temecula was incorporated in 1989 and has grown into a city of roughly 110,000 residents spread across a valley in southern Riverside County. The housing stock is predominantly detached single-family homes built during the suburban expansion of the 1990s and early 2000s - stucco exteriors, tile roofs, and attached garages are the standard here. Neighborhoods like Redhawk, Paloma del Sol, Wolf Creek, and Harveston are large master-planned communities with active HOAs, while older areas near Old Town Temecula along Front Street have a more varied and historic character.
Temecula is best known regionally for its wine country, centered on Rancho California Road where more than 40 wineries draw visitors from across Southern California. Homes in the De Luz area and near the wine country corridor tend to sit on larger lots with more rural character. The city's varied terrain - flat valley floors near the Promenade shopping area and hillside communities like Crowne Hill and Morgan Hill - means property conditions vary significantly across the city. Nearby Wildomar shares many of the same housing characteristics and is a short drive up the I-15 corridor.
Bug-free outdoor living with professionally installed screen rooms.
Learn MoreSpots fill up quickly in spring and summer - reach out now to get on the schedule and receive a written estimate at no charge.