
La Habra Sunrooms and Patios is a Sunroom Contractor serving Rowland Heights with all season rooms, sunroom additions, and patio enclosures built for the area's hillside lots and older housing stock. We have been working on San Gabriel Valley homes since 2019 and reply to every inquiry within one business day.

Every service below is matched to what Rowland Heights homes actually need, from the 1960s ranch houses near Colima Road to the hillside properties backing up to the Puente Hills Preserve.
Rowland Heights summers are hot enough that a basic screen room becomes uncomfortable by midafternoon. A fully insulated all season room with low-E glass stays usable even when temperatures climb into the 90s - explore our all season room options to see what that looks like on a San Gabriel Valley home.
Most Rowland Heights homes from the 1960s through 1990s were built with concrete slab foundations and rear yards large enough to accommodate a sunroom addition without major grading work. Adding a sunroom to a home in this area typically means building off the existing slab perimeter, which keeps costs reasonable on lots that are already well-established.
A large share of Rowland Heights homes have existing covered patios with aluminum or wood-framed covers that are structurally sound but open to the elements. Enclosing that existing structure with screens, glass, or insulated panels is one of the fastest ways to add usable square footage, and it typically costs less than a ground-up addition because the roof and frame are already in place.
Homes on the hillside streets closer to the Puente Hills often have elevated rear yards with sightlines across the valley below. A four season sunroom with floor-to-ceiling glazing captures that view while keeping the space comfortable through summer heat and the cool nights that come with elevation gain in this part of the county.
Rowland Heights gets heavy UV exposure through the long summer months, and older aluminum frames on patio covers and sunrooms fade and oxidize over time. Vinyl frames do not oxidize, do not need repainting, and hold up to the UV load in this climate without the maintenance that aluminum or wood require after a decade in place.
During Santa Ana wind season in fall and early winter, open patios in Rowland Heights collect dust and debris blown off the Puente Hills. A screened room gives homeowners an outdoor-feeling space that stays sheltered from wind-driven grit without the cost of full enclosure with glass or insulated panels.
Rowland Heights was built out mostly between the late 1960s and the early 1990s, and a lot of that housing stock is now 30 to 55 years old. Homes in that age range commonly have covered patios with aging aluminum frames, concrete flatwork that has settled and cracked, and rear yards that were designed for a different era of outdoor living. Adding a sunroom or all season room to a home in this generation means dealing with existing slab edges, older footings, and in many cases stucco exteriors that need to be matched when the new structure ties in. A contractor who has not worked on homes of this type in this area will make assumptions that do not hold up once they are on site.
The terrain adds a second layer of complexity. Streets in the northern and eastern parts of Rowland Heights climb toward the Puente Hills, and sloped lots are common. Expansive clay soils throughout the eastern San Gabriel Valley shift with the wet and dry seasons, which puts stress on any structure anchored to the ground. The Santa Ana winds that blow through every fall can reach 50 mph in exposed hillside locations. A sunroom or enclosure that is built without accounting for these local conditions - proper footings in clay soil, wind-rated glazing systems, sealed penetrations before the rainy season - will develop problems within a few years.
Because Rowland Heights is an unincorporated community, building permits for additions and structural work here go through the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works rather than a city building department. That matters practically because LA County reviews structural additions through a different process than the cities around Rowland Heights - and a contractor who shows up expecting a city permit desk will not be familiar with what the County actually requires.
We work on homes throughout Rowland Heights regularly - from the flat streets near the 99 Ranch Market on Colima Road to the hillside properties up toward the Puente Hills Preserve on Fullerton Road and Nogales Street. The hillside streets in the northern part of the community often have terraced rear yards, and we plan every project around how the new structure will anchor to grade on those sloped lots. That kind of site-specific thinking is what separates a well-built addition from one that moves or leaks within a few years.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Diamond Bar and Whittier, so our crew moves through this part of the eastern San Gabriel Valley regularly and can typically schedule a Rowland Heights assessment within the week.
Call or fill out the contact form and we will follow up within one business day. No sales pressure and no commitment required at this stage.
We visit your Rowland Heights property, measure the space, check lot setbacks and slope conditions, and discuss your goals. The written estimate you receive covers all costs with no surprise charges after you sign.
We submit the permit application to the LA County Department of Public Works on your behalf and order materials once it is approved. County review typically takes three to five weeks, and we keep you updated as it moves through the process.
Our crew completes the project and we schedule the County inspection if one is required. Before we leave, we walk through the finished room with you to confirm every detail meets your expectations.
We serve homeowners throughout Rowland Heights and the surrounding eastern San Gabriel Valley. Free estimates, written quotes, and no-pressure process from start to finish.
Rowland Heights is an unincorporated community in eastern Los Angeles County, home to roughly 48,000 to 50,000 residents. It sits between the cities of Walnut and Industry to the east and south and borders Diamond Bar along its southeastern edge. The commercial core runs along Colima Road and Nogales Street, with the 99 Ranch Market on Colima serving as one of the community's most recognized landmarks. Residentially, Rowland Heights is one of the most diverse communities in the San Gabriel Valley, with a particularly high concentration of Asian-American households and a homeownership rate that runs well above the LA County average. The community is also bordered to the north by the Puente Hills, and many neighborhoods on the northern edge of Rowland Heights back directly up to open hillside terrain.
The housing stock in Rowland Heights is predominantly single-family homes built in the period from the late 1960s through the 1990s, with stucco exteriors, attached garages, and concrete driveways that are now showing their age. Homes closer to Colima Road tend to sit on flatter lots, while those on the north and east sides of the community rise with the terrain and often have terraced yards and retaining walls. Long-term homeownership is common here - many families have lived in the same home for two or three decades - and that pattern shows up in the steady demand for major home improvements rather than quick patches. Nearby La Puente and Diamond Bar share similar housing characteristics and are part of our regular service area.
Enjoy your sunroom year-round with fully insulated four-season construction.
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Learn MoreCall us or submit the form and we will be in touch within one business day to schedule your on-site visit in Rowland Heights.