
Most sunrooms in Pomona fail because they were not designed for the heat. We start with your climate, your home, and how you plan to use the space - then we design a room you will actually live in year-round.

Sunroom design in Pomona covers the full process of planning, permitting, and building an enclosed glass room addition - most projects take eight to fourteen weeks from first conversation to move-in, depending on permit timing and room size.
Good sunroom design in Pomona starts with two things most homeowners don't expect: glass selection and permit planning. Inland Empire summer temperatures make the type of glass your contractor specifies the single most important design decision - the wrong glass turns a beautiful room into a space you can't use for four months of the year. At the same time, the City of Pomona's permitting process and many neighborhood HOA approvals add weeks to the timeline, so getting that started early is just as important as picking the right materials. If you've already started thinking about a specific style - like a vinyl sunroom with low-maintenance frames - we can incorporate that into the design from the start.
The design phase is also when you choose how the room connects to your home's layout, how it looks from the street, and what it does for your daily life. That conversation happens before a single permit is filed, so you can make changes on paper rather than mid-construction.
If your outdoor space sits empty from June through September because it's simply too hot, a properly designed sunroom with heat-blocking glass and ceiling fans can give you that space back. In Pomona's climate, the right room design means you can use the space even when it's 100 degrees outside.
If your family has outgrown your living space but you love your neighborhood and your mortgage, a sunroom addition gives you a new room without the cost of a full traditional addition or the disruption of moving. Many Pomona homeowners use the space as a second living room, a dedicated home office, or a year-round playroom.
Enclosed patios added to Pomona homes in the 1970s and 1980s were often built without proper insulation or sealed connections to the house. If yours lets in cold air in winter, gets uncomfortably hot in summer, or shows water stains after rain, a professionally designed sunroom replacement is the better long-term fix.
A well-built sunroom that matches your home's architecture and meets current building codes is an attractive feature for buyers in the Pomona area. If your home currently lacks a standout detail compared to others nearby, a permitted sunroom can be the feature that makes it memorable to buyers.
Our sunroom design service covers the complete scope from initial planning through permitted construction. We start with an on-site consultation where we walk the space, check your foundation and roofline, and discuss how you plan to use the room. From there we develop drawings that satisfy both the City of Pomona's building requirements and any HOA guidelines your neighborhood requires. If a prefabricated system suits your home and budget, we'll recommend it honestly - and if your situation calls for a fully custom build, we design that instead. Homeowners who want a specific frame material, like a vinyl sunroom, can specify that early and we incorporate it into the design drawings.
Every design includes glass specification suited to Pomona's heat load, structural framing that meets California's seismic requirements, and a foundation assessment so there are no surprises once ground is broken. We also plan for how the room connects to your home's heating and cooling system, whether that means extending your existing ductwork or sizing a mini-split unit for the space. If you want to go further and build something entirely one-of-a-kind, custom sunrooms give you complete control over every dimension and material choice.
Suits homeowners who want to maximize natural light and airflow in a mild-weather room - works well in Pomona's spring and fall but is not intended for extreme summer or winter use.
Ideal for homeowners who want a fully climate-controlled room they can use every day of the year, with insulated walls, heat-blocking glass, and a connection to the home's HVAC.
Best for homeowners who want a well-built room on a defined budget and timeline - factory-engineered components arrive ready to install and reduce on-site construction time.
For homeowners who want a room that matches the exact style and proportions of their home, with choices on every detail from roofline to flooring material and window placement.
Pomona's intense summer heat - with temperatures regularly climbing past 100 degrees in July and August - makes glass selection the most important design decision you'll make. A sunroom with standard single-pane or poorly rated glass becomes unusable for months. Choosing low-e glass and planning for shade through roof overhangs or exterior screens is not optional here - it determines whether you actually use the room year-round. Pomona also sits in a high seismic zone, which means structural framing has to use specific anchor bolts and connections the city inspector checks before signing off. These are not extras - they're what makes your room safe and legal. Homeowners in nearby Covina and Rowland Heights face the same heat conditions and seismic requirements, and we design to that same standard across all our service areas.
Many Pomona homes were built between the 1950s and 1970s, which means the foundation, electrical panel, or roof structure sometimes needs assessment before a sunroom can be safely attached. A good contractor identifies these during the initial site visit and tells you upfront what's needed and what it costs. The National Association of the Remodeling Industry recommends getting this assessment in writing before signing any contract, and we agree - it protects you from discovering mid-project that the budget needs to change.
We ask a few basic questions about where you're thinking of adding the room, roughly how large, and how you plan to use it. We reply within one business day and give you a realistic sense of the budget range before we visit - so you're not waiting for a site visit just to find out the numbers don't work.
We visit your home, check the wall where the sunroom would attach, look at your foundation and roofline, and flag anything that might need attention upfront. You'll walk away from this visit with a clear picture of your design options and a written estimate.
Once you approve the design and sign a contract, we prepare drawings and submit to the City of Pomona for a permit - and handle your HOA submission if your neighborhood requires one. Permit review typically takes two to four weeks, and we handle all questions from the city.
Construction moves through foundation, framing, glazing, and finishing in sequence. A city inspector checks the completed room before you use it. When it passes, we walk you through the space, show you how to operate windows and vents, and hand over your warranty and permit records.
Free on-site consultation. Written estimate before any commitment. We handle permits and HOA submissions for you.
(909) 729-4969Every design we produce starts with Pomona's climate in mind - not a generic template. We specify heat-blocking glass and shade elements suited to inland temperatures above 100 degrees, so the room you get is one you can actually use in July.
We handle the City of Pomona building permit application and your HOA design submission if your neighborhood requires one. You don't chase paperwork or wait on hold - we do that, and we keep you updated at every step so there are no surprises.
One of the most common complaints about contractors in the Pomona area is budgets that grow mid-project. We give you a detailed written price before any work begins. If something unexpected comes up - like a foundation that needs reinforcement - we tell you immediately and get your approval before we proceed.
You can verify any contractor's license yourself in minutes at the{' '} California Contractors State License Board website. A licensed contractor is required to carry insurance that protects your home if anything goes wrong. We encourage every homeowner to check before signing any contract.
Each of these proof points comes down to one thing: a sunroom project in Pomona has a lot of moving parts - permits, HOA reviews, seismic requirements, and a climate that punishes poor glass choices. We've built a process that handles all of it, so you get the room you planned rather than a project that stalls or goes over budget. The CSLB makes it easy to verify any contractor's license status - we encourage you to check ours and every other contractor you consider.
Low-maintenance vinyl framing paired with heat-blocking glass - a popular choice for Pomona homeowners who want a durable, weather-tight room without wood upkeep.
Learn MoreFull architectural control over dimensions, materials, and layout for homeowners who want a room built to exact specifications rather than a standard package.
Learn MoreContractor schedules fill up quickly before summer. Call or submit a request now and lock in your design consultation before the wait grows.