
Clovis Sunrooms and Patios serves Kerman homeowners with custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen room installations designed for the San Joaquin Valley climate - we have been building in Fresno County since 2017 and respond to all new inquiries within one business day.
Clovis Sunrooms and Patios serves Kerman homeowners with custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen room installations designed for the San Joaquin Valley climate - we have been building in Fresno County since 2017 and respond to all new inquiries within one business day.

Kerman homes range from modest postwar ranch houses to larger lots on the edges of town, and a custom build lets you match the room exactly to your footprint and budget. Our custom sunrooms are designed from the ground up for Central Valley conditions - with glass ratings, roof overhangs, and footing depths chosen specifically for this climate rather than a generic national template.
Many Kerman homes from the 1960s through the 1980s have a bare concrete patio slab that bakes in the summer sun and sits unused from June through September. Enclosing that existing slab with walls, a roof, and screened or glass panels creates a shaded, protected space without the cost of pouring a new foundation.
Spring and fall evenings in Kerman are genuinely pleasant, but the insects that come with the irrigated farmland surrounding the city make sitting outside difficult after dark. A screen room keeps the breeze coming through while shutting out the bugs, and it costs considerably less than a fully enclosed sunroom.
With Kerman summers regularly pushing past 100 degrees Fahrenheit, a room that only works in mild weather is not worth building. A four season sunroom with insulated glass, proper framing, and a dedicated cooling unit stays comfortable in July - so the addition actually earns its keep year-round, not just in October and April.
Kerman homes tend to be modestly sized single-story ranch houses, and adding a sunroom is one of the most cost-effective ways to gain real livable square footage without gutting the interior. A rear addition opening off the living room or kitchen fits naturally onto the typical Kerman lot layout.
A solid patio cover is the fastest way to make a Kerman backyard usable during the summer months. Blocking the direct afternoon sun drops the slab surface temperature dramatically and makes outdoor dining and relaxing genuinely comfortable even in the hottest weeks of a San Joaquin Valley summer.
Kerman sits in the San Joaquin Valley where summer temperatures climb above 100 degrees Fahrenheit and stay there for weeks. That kind of heat is hard on building materials - it dries out caulk and sealants fast, degrades single-pane glass, and turns an uninsulated room into an oven. A sunroom built without high-performance glass and a properly sized cooling solution will sit unused from June through September, which defeats the entire purpose of building it. Every project we design in Kerman starts with an honest conversation about solar orientation, glass performance ratings, and what it takes to keep a room genuinely comfortable in this specific climate.
The clay soils that underlie most Kerman neighborhoods add a structural challenge that matters at the footing stage. These soils swell when winter rain soaks the ground and shrink when the dry summer bakes them out - a cycle that puts stress on any concrete connection between a new addition and an existing slab. Kerman also has a number of properties on larger lots or with outbuildings, which means some jobs require more flatwork assessment before we start. Getting the footing depth and soil conditions right before construction begins is far less expensive than correcting cracked footings after the fact.
Our crew works throughout Kerman regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The majority of homes we visit in Kerman are single-story ranch houses built between the 1960s and 1980s - stucco exteriors, slab foundations, and modest backyards with concrete patios. That housing profile is common in small Central Valley cities, and it means we can assess a Kerman property quickly and give you an accurate estimate without surprises during construction. Some older properties closer to downtown and a few on the city's edges also have larger lots or agricultural outbuildings that factor into how we approach a job.
Kerman calls itself the Nation's Friendliest City, and the community lives up to that reputation. The city is compact and tight-knit, with Kerman High School and the surrounding neighborhoods making up a community where word of mouth travels fast. We pull permits through the City of Kerman and handle all inspection scheduling so you do not have to coordinate with the building department yourself.
We also serve communities surrounding Kerman, including Mendota to the west and Fresno to the east. If you are on the edge of Kerman near either of those communities, we are still the right call.
We reply to all new inquiries within one business day. The first conversation covers your home, your backyard, and what you want to build - no pressure, just enough information to schedule an on-site visit.
We visit your property in Kerman, measure the space, check the existing slab and soil conditions, and walk through your options. You leave the visit with a written estimate and a clear picture of what the project costs - no vague ranges and no surprises later.
Once you approve the design, we submit the permit application to the City of Kerman and schedule construction to begin as soon as the permit is issued. You do not need to be home for every day of work, but we keep you informed at each stage.
When construction is complete, we walk through the finished room with you, confirm all inspections are passed, and make sure you are satisfied before we consider the job done. Most Kerman projects wrap up three to six weeks after construction begins.
We serve all of Kerman, CA and reply within one business day. Call us or send a message to get your free estimate.
(559) 826-1896Kerman is a small city of roughly 15,000 people in Fresno County, surrounded by almond orchards and cotton fields that define this part of the San Joaquin Valley. Most of the housing stock in Kerman consists of single-story ranch houses built from the 1960s through the 1980s, sitting on modest city lots with concrete patios and stucco exteriors. A smaller number of properties on the city's edges occupy larger lots that reflect Kerman's agricultural roots, with outbuildings, gravel driveways, or old irrigation infrastructure still present on the parcel. The north and east sides of the city include some newer subdivisions from the 2000s to 2020s, with tile roofs and attached two-car garages, which are a different profile from the older homes near downtown.
The community is tightly knit and owner-occupied at a high rate, which means homeowners here tend to invest in maintaining and improving their properties. Kerman sits about 20 miles west of downtown Fresno along Highway 180 - a convenient location that puts it well within our regular service territory. We also work frequently in Mendota to the west along the San Joaquin Valley corridor, so if you have neighbors or family in either city, we are a familiar name in the area. For homeowners closer to the eastern edge of Kerman, the city of Fresno is our home base, and the commute to Kerman is a straightforward drive.
Call us or send a message today. We serve all of Kerman and the surrounding San Joaquin Valley communities, and we reply to every inquiry within one business day.