
Menifee Sunrooms & Patios is a sunroom contractor serving Jurupa Valley, building patio enclosures, patio-to-sunroom conversions, and four-season rooms across a city with one of the most varied housing stocks in western Riverside County. Whether your home is a 1970s ranch in Rubidoux or a newer tract build near Mira Loma, we know what the property conditions here look like and how to build a sunroom that holds up. We respond to every inquiry within one business day.

Covered patios on Jurupa Valley homes - from the older concrete slabs in Rubidoux to the newer ones in Mira Loma - are often the right starting point for an enclosed sunroom. We convert existing covered patios to sunrooms by building on your existing structure, which reduces cost and construction time compared to a ground-up addition. Every conversion is designed around your specific slab condition and existing roof attachment.
A standard patio enclosure is one of the most cost-effective ways to add usable living space to a Jurupa Valley home. We use aluminum framing and tempered glass panels to enclose your existing patio slab and connect the structure cleanly to your home's exterior wall. The result is a protected space that keeps Inland Empire heat, dust, and Santa Ana wind gusts out of your outdoor living area.
Summers in Jurupa Valley regularly push past 100 degrees, and winter nights in January can drop near freezing. A four-season sunroom uses insulated framing, low-emissivity glass, and a dedicated mini-split or HVAC connection to create a room that is genuinely comfortable across the full range of temperatures this climate produces - not just in mild weather.
Older parts of Jurupa Valley - particularly in Glen Avon and Pedley - often have larger lots with space for a full sunroom addition beyond the existing patio footprint. We design and permit these additions to connect structurally to the original home, with footings sized for the clay soil conditions common in this area so the new space does not shift away from the house over time.
Enclosed patio rooms are a practical choice for Jurupa Valley homeowners who want a protected outdoor living space without the cost and permitting complexity of a full room addition. These structures use solid panels in some sections and glass or screen in others, letting you choose the balance of shade, airflow, and natural light that works best for how you use your backyard.
Screen rooms are a lower-cost option that extends the usable outdoor season in Jurupa Valley by keeping insects, wind-driven dust, and debris out of the patio area without the cost of glass panels. They are a good fit for homeowners who mainly need weather and pest protection rather than full climate control, and they can often be upgraded to a glass enclosure at a later date.
Jurupa Valley is unusual in western Riverside County because of how much variety exists within a single city. The communities that merged to form it - Rubidoux, Glen Avon, Pedley, Mira Loma, and others - each have distinct housing stock. Rubidoux and Pedley have older homes, some dating to the 1940s and 1950s, with concrete slabs and stucco that have been through decades of Inland Empire heat cycles and expansive soil movement. Mira Loma and the newer sections of the city have tract homes built in the 1990s and 2000s that are in better structural shape but still sit on the same clay-heavy soils. That range of conditions means no two job sites in Jurupa Valley look exactly the same - and a contractor who works only in newer planned communities may not know how to assess an older home in this city accurately.
The clay and adobe soils throughout Jurupa Valley are among the most common causes of cracked concrete slabs and shifting foundations in the Inland Empire. The USDA Web Soil Survey shows the western Riverside County area as having significant expansive soil coverage, and anyone building a sunroom addition or enclosure here needs to account for that in footing design and slab-to-wall connection details. Beyond soil conditions, the city's climate produces temperatures regularly above 100 degrees in summer, occasional frost overnight in winter, and Santa Ana wind events every fall - a combination that puts real demands on glass specifications, framing connections, and roof panel anchoring. A sunroom that performs well in this climate is not the same build as one that would perform well in a milder part of Southern California.
Our crew works throughout Jurupa Valley regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Jurupa Valley's building department. The city was incorporated in 2011 and has been building out its municipal services since then - the building department handles permit applications directly and coordinates inspections in a straightforward way. For older homes in Rubidoux and Pedley, we pay close attention to the existing slab condition during the site visit, because concrete that has been through 40 or 50 years of Inland Empire soil movement often has hairline cracks or slight settling that needs to be addressed before a new enclosure is attached to it.
The Santa Ana River Trail runs through Jurupa Valley along the river bottom, and the neighborhoods near the river - particularly in lower-lying parts of the city - can experience drainage issues in heavy rain years. Homes in those areas sometimes have older French drains or surface drainage channels that need to be factored into where a patio enclosure can be placed. We look for these details during the site visit so the design we propose works with your property's actual drainage, not against it. The City of Jurupa Valley maintains permit and zoning information on its website for homeowners who want to review setback requirements before reaching out.
We serve the broader western Inland Empire, including nearby Eastvale and Moreno Valley, and the experience we have built across these neighboring cities informs how we approach every project in Jurupa Valley. From the older streets near the Jurupa Mountains Discovery Center to the newer subdivisions near Mira Loma, we know the housing stock and the permit process throughout this area.
Call us or fill out the contact form with a brief description of what you have in mind - the type of space, approximately how large, and your general timeline. We reply within one business day to arrange an on-site visit.
We visit your property to measure, check the existing slab condition and soil, review setback requirements, and understand your goals. You get a written estimate with a clear cost breakdown, a project timeline, and notes on any site-specific factors - no commitment required to receive the estimate.
Once you approve the quote, we prepare and submit the building permit application to the City of Jurupa Valley. We handle all city communications and update you as the permit progresses. When approval comes through, we schedule the build and confirm a start date with you.
Construction on most enclosures and conversions runs 1 to 3 weeks on-site. We schedule the final city inspection and walk you through the finished space together. The project closes out only when the inspection passes and you are satisfied with the work.
We work throughout Jurupa Valley - from older homes in Rubidoux to newer builds near Mira Loma - and we understand the clay soils, varied housing stock, and Inland Empire climate conditions that affect every project here. Call or submit the form for a no-pressure estimate.
(951) 593-1061Jurupa Valley is a city in western Riverside County that was incorporated in 2011 from a collection of older unincorporated communities - Rubidoux, Glen Avon, Pedley, Mira Loma, and others - that had been part of the county for decades before coming together as a single municipality. The city covers roughly 43 square miles and had a population of about 110,000 at the 2020 Census, making it one of the larger cities in Riverside County by population. The housing stock reflects the city's patchwork history: Rubidoux has older single-family homes with mature trees and larger lots, many built in the 1960s and 1970s, while Mira Loma and the western parts of the city have newer tract subdivisions built in the 1990s through 2000s. Stucco exteriors are the norm throughout the city, as they are across most of Southern California. The Santa Ana River runs along the northern boundary of the city, and the Santa Ana River Trail follows it, providing a popular cycling and walking route for residents across the area.
Much of the area around Mira Loma is known for its large warehouse and distribution operations - some of the largest in the Inland Empire are located nearby, and many Jurupa Valley residents work in logistics or related industries. The Jurupa Mountains Discovery Center, a local science and nature museum with a well-known fossil collection, sits in the hills on the southern edge of the city and is a landmark many families have visited. Nearby Eastvale sits just to the east along the 60 freeway and shares similar tract-home construction and Inland Empire climate conditions - we serve homeowners in both cities and move between them regularly.
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Learn MoreWe serve homeowners throughout Jurupa Valley - from Rubidoux and Pedley to Glen Avon and Mira Loma. Call us or submit a contact form and we will respond within one business day.