
Your concrete patio is already halfway there. We enclose it with proper walls, heat-blocking glass, and a city permit - so you get a real room, not an afterthought.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Clovis means building walls, installing windows and a roof, and tying the new space into your home so it becomes a proper livable room - most projects take six to ten weeks total from contract signing, with two to four weeks of active construction once permits are approved.
Most Clovis homes built after the 1970s already have a poured concrete patio slab, which is your biggest head start. We use that existing slab as the floor of the new room, which saves time and cost compared to building a full addition from scratch. If you want to explore what the space could look like before committing to a full conversion, our deck-to-sunroom conversion page covers a related project type and may help you compare options.
The City of Clovis requires a building permit for this type of work, and your HOA - if you have one - needs to approve the project before the permit is filed. We handle both. The permit process is what ensures your new room officially counts as livable square footage and does not cause headaches when you sell.
If your patio sits unused from June through September because it is simply too hot to be out there, the space is not pulling its weight. In Clovis, where summer temperatures regularly hit triple digits, an unenclosed patio is unusable for a third of the year. A sunroom conversion gives you that space back with shade, climate control, and real comfort.
If you have furniture, a rug, or a fan on your patio and find yourself wishing it were just a little more protected from the heat, wind, or dust, you are already living like it is a room. Converting it formally means proper insulation, real windows, and a connection to your home's air conditioning instead of stopgap solutions.
If your family has outgrown your current floor plan but you are not ready to move, a sunroom conversion is one of the most cost-effective ways to add usable square footage. In Clovis, where home prices have risen significantly, adding a permitted room can also increase your home's assessed value.
If your aluminum patio cover or wood pergola is rusting, sagging, or just looking tired, you are already facing a replacement cost. That money can often go toward a full sunroom conversion instead - giving you a far more functional and durable result for a comparable investment.
We handle the full conversion from first site visit through final city inspection. That includes slab assessment, framing, roofing, window and door installation, electrical rough-in, and coordination with your HVAC contractor for heating and cooling. Homeowners who want a lighter-touch option first - something more open than a full glass enclosure - can also look at our enclosed patio rooms service, which uses similar construction methods but may suit a different budget or use case.
Glass selection is one of the most consequential decisions in a Clovis conversion. We discuss heat-blocking glazing options with every homeowner before anything is ordered, because the window quality determines whether the room is comfortable in August or not. For homeowners who want to take the design further, our deck-to-sunroom conversion service follows the same permit-managed process and is worth reviewing if your home has a raised deck rather than a ground-level patio slab.
Best for homeowners who want a climate-controlled room connected to their HVAC system, usable in Clovis heat and mild valley winters alike.
Best for homeowners who mainly want protection from heat, dust, and bugs during spring, summer, and fall without the full HVAC integration cost.
Best for homeowners whose existing slab needs significant repair or whose patio footprint is being expanded as part of the conversion project.
Clovis sits in the San Joaquin Valley, where summer heat makes unenclosed outdoor spaces unusable for months at a time. Temperatures above 100 degrees are common from June through September, and without shade and cooling, a concrete patio is essentially wasted space during the hottest part of the year. A properly built sunroom - with heat-blocking glass and a connection to your home's cooling system - turns that slab into one of the most-used rooms in the house. The U.S. Department of Energy notes that mini-split systems are a practical way to add cooling to new additions without extending existing ductwork, and this is the option we recommend for most Clovis conversions.
Clovis has also seen strong home price growth, which means adding a permitted room is an investment in real equity, not just comfort. Homeowners throughout Fresno deal with the same heat and the same desire for usable indoor-outdoor space, and we serve them alongside our Clovis customers. Homeowners in Sanger and the surrounding communities frequently ask us about this service as well. The permit and HOA process is one of the biggest sources of uncertainty homeowners face, and handling it correctly from the start is the difference between a room that sells your home and one that complicates the transaction.
Tell us your patio size, what you want to use the room for, and whether you have an HOA. We reply within one business day and schedule a free on-site visit - no obligation, no sales pressure.
We measure your patio, inspect the concrete slab, and examine how your home's roof and walls connect to the patio. Within one to two weeks you receive a written proposal breaking down cost, timeline, and exactly what is included.
We submit plans to the City of Clovis Building and Safety Division and, if needed, to your HOA. Plan review typically adds two to four weeks. We handle the paperwork and keep you updated - you do not need to make a single call to the building department.
Once permits are approved, framing, roofing, and windows go up in the first few days. Finishing work follows. A city inspector signs off before we consider the job done. We walk through the finished room with you and address any punch-list items before we leave.
Free on-site estimate. We handle permits and HOA approvals. No obligation.
(559) 826-1896We file and track the building permit with the City of Clovis on your behalf, from the initial plan submission through the final inspection sign-off. Your new room will be a legal, documented addition - protecting you at resale and on any insurance claim.
Verify our California contractor licenseWe specify heat-blocking low-emissivity glass on all Clovis conversion projects because standard single-pane windows turn a sunroom into an oven by July. The right glass is not a luxury upgrade here - it is what makes the room usable nine months of the year instead of three.
Many Clovis neighborhoods - especially those built in the northeast since the 1990s - are governed by HOAs that require separate approval before a city permit can be filed. We know how to prepare that submission and keep your project from stalling at this step.
We inspect your concrete patio slab during the estimate visit and identify any cracks or uneven areas before we give you a final price. Clovis heat cycles are hard on concrete, and finding problems after walls are up is far more disruptive than addressing them upfront.
Every one of these points comes down to the same thing: you deserve to know what you are getting before work starts, and the room you end up with should be exactly what was described in your proposal. That is the standard we hold ourselves to on every project in Clovis and the surrounding valley.
If your home has a raised deck instead of a ground-level slab, this service covers the structural assessment and enclosure work specific to elevated platforms.
Learn MoreA solid-panel enclosure option for homeowners who want full weather protection and privacy beyond what a screen room provides.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up - locking in your project now means you could be enjoying your new room before next summer's heat arrives.