
La Habra Sunrooms and Patios provides sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Fullerton homeowners. We have been serving Fullerton since 2019 and know the Craftsman bungalows, ranch houses, and postwar tract homes that fill this city well enough to get your permit through the Fullerton Building Division without surprises.

Fullerton homes built in the 1950s and 1960s typically have concrete patio slabs that already serve as a starting foundation for a sunroom addition. We match the exterior finish and roofline of your existing home so the new room looks like it has always been there, not like an afterthought.
Many Fullerton ranch homes have covered patio slabs that are one step away from a proper enclosed room. Enclosing the existing covered area keeps the permit scope manageable and avoids the cost of new foundation work, making it a practical first upgrade for homeowners who want more usable indoor space.
Fullerton gets hit by Santa Ana winds every fall, which carry dust and debris that make open patios uncomfortable. A screen room keeps the outdoor feel while filtering the air, and it is a cost-effective option for homeowners who want outdoor living space without committing to a full enclosure.
Fullerton summers push into the 90s consistently, and a standard three-season room can become uncomfortable during those months without proper insulation and climate control. A four-season sunroom with insulated glazing and a dedicated HVAC source gives you a room you can use as a home office or living space every day of the year.
Direct summer sun bakes unshaded concrete slabs in Fullerton, making the patio unusable on the hottest afternoons. A solid or lattice patio cover reduces surface temperature significantly and extends how much of the year you can actually use the outdoor space without discomfort.
Fullerton has many homes that had patio rooms or enclosures added in the 1980s and 1990s. Single-pane aluminum frames from that era are drafty in winter and hot in summer. A targeted remodel replaces the glazing and framing without demolishing the whole structure, which restores comfort at a fraction of the cost of starting over.
Fullerton has about 50,000 housing units, and a large share of them were built before 1980. The older Craftsman bungalows near Downtown Fullerton have wood-frame walls, original wood windows, and foundations that settled decades ago. Ranch homes from the 1950s and 1960s have low-pitched roofs and concrete slabs that are common starting points for sunroom projects, but they require different planning than newer construction. A contractor who has only worked on modern homes will not know where water tends to enter a 1940s wall assembly or how to properly flash a new roof addition onto an existing clay tile or composition shingle roof from that era.
Fullerton also experiences real Santa Ana wind events every fall and winter. Gusts exceeding 50 mph are not unusual, and a sunroom with improperly anchored framing or a glazing system not rated for wind load will show its weaknesses quickly after the first big event. California Building Code wind load requirements apply here, and we specify framing and glazing to meet them. Getting this right at the planning stage protects both the room and the rest of your home.
Our crew works throughout Fullerton regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits from the Fullerton Building Division and have worked on properties in neighborhoods ranging from the older streets near Downtown Fullerton to the postwar ranch tracts further east toward Harbor Boulevard.
Fullerton sits in northern Orange County and is served by the 91 and 57 freeways. The city spans roughly 22 square miles, with neighborhoods near Cal State Fullerton on the eastern side of town and the older, denser blocks near the historic downtown core to the west. The Fullerton Arboretum at the edge of the CSUF campus is a familiar landmark for anyone who works in this part of the city. Homes near CSUF tend to have more rental conversions and property manager decisions involved, while the neighborhoods around the Downtown Fullerton historic district see more owner-occupant renovation projects.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Buena Park, CA directly to the west, and we work regularly in Brea, CA to the north. If your property sits near the border of any of these cities, we cover the whole area.
Call or submit the form on this page. We reply within one business day and schedule a time to come to your Fullerton property at your convenience - no automated scheduling, a real person calls you back.
We visit your home, measure the space, and inspect the existing foundation and roof connection point. You receive a written price covering all labor, materials, and permit fees before any work begins - the price we quote is the price you pay.
We submit permit documents to the Fullerton Building Division and begin construction once approved. You do not need to be home for every workday, but we coordinate with you around your schedule and keep you updated as work progresses.
After construction is complete, we schedule and pass the final city inspection. You receive the signed permit card confirming the work is code-compliant, and we walk through the finished space with you before we leave.
We serve Fullerton homeowners from Craftsman bungalows near downtown to ranch homes on the east side of the city. No pressure, no vague estimates - just a written price after we see your property.
Fullerton is a mid-size city of roughly 140,000 people in northern Orange County, covering about 22 square miles. It is a fully built-out community with very little open land remaining, which means virtually all construction and home improvement work here involves existing properties, not new builds. The housing stock is a mix of older Craftsman bungalows and Spanish Colonial Revival homes from the 1920s and 1930s near the downtown historic district, postwar ranch homes from the 1950s and 1960s throughout the middle of the city, and some denser apartment and condominium buildings clustered near Cal State Fullerton and along major commercial corridors.
The area around Downtown Fullerton - centered on Harbor Boulevard and Commonwealth Avenue - is known for its preserved brick buildings from the 1920s and 1930s, local restaurants, and music venues. The Fullerton Arboretum on the CSUF campus is a well-known green space that draws visitors from across the region. Fullerton borders Anaheim, CA to the south and Brea, CA to the north, and our service area covers all three cities.
Enjoy your sunroom year-round with fully insulated four-season construction.
Learn MoreKeep bugs out and fresh air in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreStylish enclosed patio rooms that blend indoor comfort with outdoor views.
Learn MoreGlass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and extend your outdoor season.
Learn MoreCall us today or submit a free estimate request. We serve all of Fullerton and reply within one business day.