Deck-to-Sunroom Conversion
Convert a raised deck into a fully enclosed, permitted sunroom - the same quality result for elevated structures.
Learn MoreYour patio sits empty half the year because of the heat. We convert existing Upland patios into fully enclosed, permitted sunrooms you can actually use in July.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Upland means enclosing your existing patio with framed walls, quality windows, and a proper roof to create a weatherproof, livable room - most projects take eight to fourteen weeks total from permit submission to final inspection, with three to six weeks of active construction once approvals are in hand.
Most homeowners we work with in Upland are tired of watching their patio collect dust from June through September. The space is already there - it just needs walls, glass, and a roof to become a room you actually want to be in. Patio-to-sunroom conversion uses your existing slab as the starting point, which makes it one of the more cost-effective ways to add square footage to your home. If you want to go even further and add dedicated climate control from the ground up, take a look at our enclosed patio rooms service for a comparison.
Every conversion we do in Upland goes through the city's full permit and inspection process. That protects your investment and makes the new square footage official on your home's record.
If your patio sits empty from June through September because Upland's heat is simply too intense for open-air living, you are losing the use of a major part of your property. A properly built sunroom with heat-blocking glass and ventilation gives you that space back for twelve months a year.
When a patio does not feel like a purposeful space, it tends to fill with bikes, boxes, and things without anywhere else to go. That is a sign the space is not working in its current form. Enclosing it creates a room with a clear identity - and gives everything stored there somewhere else to live.
Many Upland homes have aluminum patio covers or wood pergolas installed decades ago that are now rusting, sagging, or pulling away from the house wall. Rather than patching a cover that still leaves you exposed to heat and Santa Ana winds, a conversion starts fresh with a structure that is fully weatherproof.
If your home feels tight but a full room addition seems like too much, your patio may already be the square footage you need. Converting an existing patio is generally less disruptive and less expensive than building from scratch because the slab and footprint are already there.
We handle the entire project: site assessment, permit application, slab evaluation, framing, window installation, roofing, electrical, and final inspection. Every estimate starts with an in-person visit where we check the condition and thickness of your existing slab - older patios in Upland's 1960s and 1970s neighborhoods are often thinner than what is needed to carry enclosed walls and a roof. If reinforcement or new footings are required, we tell you upfront and include that work in the quote. No surprises after demolition starts.
We also manage the permit process with the City of Upland's Building and Safety Division and, if your neighborhood has an HOA, we help prepare the architectural review submission so the approval process moves in one direction. For homeowners who want the enclosed space to feel completely integrated with the rest of the house, we also offer deck-to-sunroom conversion - the same quality of work for raised deck structures.
Suits homeowners who want a comfortable spring-through-fall room at a lower starting cost.
Ideal for those who want full HVAC connection and year-round comfort even in Upland's July heat.
Right for patios poured in the 1960s through 1980s that need structural upgrades before framing.
Covers the full dual-approval workflow for homeowners in Upland's HOA-governed neighborhoods.
Best when the new room needs to blend cleanly into the home's existing roofline and eave height.
Upland sits at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains in the Inland Empire, where summer temperatures regularly reach the high 90s and occasionally top 100 degrees. A sunroom built without the right glass and ventilation will become unusable from June through September - essentially a greenhouse. This is why low-e heat-blocking glass and proper roof ventilation are not optional extras here - they are the baseline. The city also sits in an active seismic region and is subject to strong Santa Ana wind events each fall, which means roof anchoring and structural connections matter as much as the glass. California's building code accounts for both, which is one more reason permits protect you. The California Department of Housing and Community Development publishes the residential code requirements if you want to read the specifics yourself.
We serve homeowners throughout the region, including Chino and Ontario. Whether your home is in one of Upland's older neighborhoods near Euclid Avenue or in a newer HOA development up near the foothills, we assess the existing structure and give you a complete picture of what the project involves before you commit to anything.
We respond within one business day. The first conversation covers your patio size, whether you have an existing cover, and what you want to use the room for. No commitment - just enough information to schedule a useful site visit.
We visit your home, measure the patio, check the slab condition and thickness, and look at the roofline. We also ask about your HOA if you have one. You receive a written estimate within a few days - not a number off the top of someone's head.
Once you approve the scope and price, we submit plans to the City of Upland for permit review - typically two to four weeks. If your HOA needs drawings, we prepare those too. You do not manage the permit process yourself.
With permits approved, framing and roofing begin - the noisiest phase lasts about one to two weeks. After construction, a city inspector verifies the work meets code. Your contractor should schedule that inspection and be present for it.
No pressure, no obligation. We visit your home, check the slab, and give you a written estimate - so you know exactly what the project involves before you decide.
(909) 755-8782Every conversion we do in Upland goes through the City of Upland's full permit and inspection process. That is not optional for us - it protects the finished room on your home's official record and protects you at resale. The City of Upland Building and Safety Division inspects the work at key stages, and we are there for every one of those visits.
We specify low-e heat-blocking glass on every conversion we build in this area. Upland summers are genuinely hot, and a sunroom built with the wrong glass becomes unusable from June through September. The glass we use is not an upgrade - it is how every job is done here.
Many Upland neighborhoods, especially north of Foothill Boulevard near the foothills, have HOAs with strict rules about exterior additions. We have prepared architectural review submissions for multiple HOA communities in the area and know what those committees expect before they ask for it.
Older patios in Upland's mid-century neighborhoods are often thinner than what is needed to support enclosed walls and a roof. We check slab thickness and condition during the estimate visit - not after demolition starts. If reinforcement is needed, it is in the quote from day one.
Every project comes with a written scope, a clear payment schedule, and a contractor who answers the phone. That is the standard we hold ourselves to on every job we take in Upland and the surrounding Inland Empire.
Convert a raised deck into a fully enclosed, permitted sunroom - the same quality result for elevated structures.
Learn MoreFull enclosure with climate control built in from the start, ideal when you want the room fully integrated with your home's HVAC.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Upland mean the sooner you start, the sooner you are using your new room - contact us today to get your project on the schedule.