
PatioScape Pomona Sunrooms is Chino's local sunroom contractor, building patio enclosures, sunroom additions, and four season rooms for homeowners throughout the city. We pull all permits through the Chino Building and Safety Division and respond to every inquiry within one business day.

Most Chino tract homes from the 1980s and 1990s have a concrete patio slab out back - often partially shaded by an aging aluminum cover that provides little real protection from Chino's summer heat. Our patio enclosures transform that existing slab into a properly insulated, sealed room that stays comfortable well into triple-digit summer days.
Chino homeowners in neighborhoods like The Preserve have mid-size lots with room to expand, but the open yard space sits unused for months during the hottest part of the year. A properly designed sunroom addition captures that square footage and turns it into livable space - a home office, family room, or quiet retreat - without the full cost of a traditional room addition.
Chino's climate is more extreme than coastal Southern California - summers top 100 degrees Fahrenheit and Santa Ana wind events bring dry heat and dust. A four season room built with heat-blocking glass and a proper HVAC connection handles these conditions without leaving you stuck with a room you can only use in spring and fall.
Chino's warm evenings bring insects, and the open spaces along the city's edges mean gnats and mosquitoes are a real issue in many backyards during spring and summer. A screened room gives you fresh outdoor air and natural cross-ventilation without the bugs - a straightforward upgrade for any Chino home with an existing patio slab.
Chino families who work from home or need a dedicated study space find that an all-season room provides the separation of a true interior room with the natural light of an outdoor-facing addition. The fully insulated structure keeps out Chino's summer heat and winter overnight chill equally well, making it genuinely usable twelve months a year.
Chino's newer subdivisions were often built with open-air patios that lack any real protection from the elements. Enclosing an existing patio into a proper room - with insulated walls, energy-efficient glass, and a finished interior - adds usable square footage without the disruption of a full new construction project.
Chino sits in the western Inland Empire, where summer heat is considerably more intense than coastal Southern California. Daytime highs regularly reach 95 to 105 degrees Fahrenheit from June through September, and the city is in the path of Santa Ana wind events every fall. These conditions matter when selecting glass, specifying ventilation, and anchoring a sunroom frame. A room designed without accounting for Chino's heat will be uncomfortable for a third of the year. Chino's fall wind events can also damage poorly attached structures, so framing connections and frame-to-house attachments need to be built to withstand more than a gentle coastal breeze.
Most homes in Chino were built between 1980 and 2005, during the city's rapid conversion from dairy farmland to residential neighborhoods. These tract homes were built quickly in large subdivisions, with stucco exteriors and concrete patio slabs that are now 20 to 40 years old. Clay-heavy soil under many Chino properties expands and contracts with seasonal moisture, which puts stress on existing slabs and means new footings need to be properly designed for local soil conditions. The Chino Building and Safety Division requires permits for all enclosed additions, and California's seismic standards add a layer of structural requirements that apply to sunroom framing throughout the state.
Our crew works throughout Chino regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Chino's housing stock is dominated by tract homes built on former dairy farmland, which means we routinely encounter concrete slabs that were poured over expansive clay soil. Before any enclosure or addition begins, we assess the existing slab and soil conditions so we can recommend the right foundation approach - reusing the slab where it is sound, or adding new footings where the ground demands it.
Chino is bordered by Ontario to the north, Pomona to the northeast, and Chino Hills to the south. The city sits near the intersection of the 60, 71, and 83 freeways, which keeps our crew moving efficiently between job sites. We have worked on homes throughout Chino - from neighborhoods in the northern part of the city near the airport to families in The Preserve in south Chino who are seeing their homes reach the 15- to 20-year mark. Homeowners in neighboring Chino Hills, CA to the south call us regularly, and we serve that community as part of our regular work area. We also work frequently in Ontario, CA directly to the north.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form. We respond within one business day and will ask a few questions about your property and project goals before scheduling a visit.
We visit your Chino home, assess the existing patio slab condition, and evaluate soil and foundation factors before recommending options. This is where we identify any clay-soil considerations so there are no cost surprises once work begins.
After you sign the contract, we submit plans to the Chino Building and Safety Division. Plan review typically takes a few weeks. We track the status and keep you informed so there are no waiting surprises.
Once the permit is approved, the crew begins. City inspectors review work at required stages. When the room is complete, we walk you through everything and hand over all permit documentation - keep these records for when you sell or refinance.
We serve all of Chino, CA. Call us or submit your details and we will respond within one business day with a free estimate.
(909) 729-4969Chino is a city of roughly 90,000 residents in San Bernardino County, sitting in the western part of the Inland Empire about 35 miles east of downtown Los Angeles. The city grew rapidly from the 1980s through the 2000s as housing developments replaced the dairy farms that once defined the landscape. Most of Chino's homes were built during this growth period, creating a housing stock of predominantly single-family tract homes with stucco exteriors and concrete driveways and patios. The Chino Airport, home to the Planes of Fame Air Museum, sits in the southern part of the city and is a well-known local landmark.
Chino has a high owner-occupancy rate, and most households are families who relocated from more expensive parts of Los Angeles and Orange County looking for larger homes at lower prices. The Preserve, a large master-planned community in south Chino, is one of the newer residential developments in the city, with homes built primarily in the 2000s and 2010s that are now reaching the age where first-generation exterior materials and systems need attention. The city is served by major freeways including the 60, 71, and 83. Neighboring Chino Hills, CA to the south and Ontario, CA to the north are also part of our regular service area.
Our schedule fills up fast. Contact PatioScape Pomona Sunrooms now to reserve your free on-site consultation and get a written estimate with no obligation.