
Clovis Sunrooms and Patios serves Kingsburg homeowners with enclosed patio rooms, patio enclosures, and custom sunroom additions - a local crew serving the Central Valley since 2017 that knows how to build in the heat and on the flat valley lots common throughout this area.
Clovis Sunrooms and Patios serves Kingsburg homeowners with enclosed patio rooms, patio enclosures, and custom sunroom additions - a local crew serving the Central Valley since 2017 that knows how to build in the heat and on the flat valley lots common throughout this area.

Most Kingsburg homes have a concrete patio slab in the backyard that sits empty from June through September because the heat makes it unusable. Our enclosed patio rooms turn that slab into a weatherproof, shaded living space you can actually enjoy - a real room with proper windows, insulation, and cooling rather than just a covered slab.
Kingsburg lots are flat with standard-sized backyards, and most homes have an existing covered patio we can work with. Enclosing that covered area adds walls and windows without the cost of building a full room addition from scratch, and it gives you a protected space that handles the dusty valley winds and winter tule fog just as well as the summer heat.
A fully conditioned sunroom lets Kingsburg homeowners use the space in December tule fog and August heat alike. We build four season rooms with insulated frames, heat-blocking glass, and dedicated cooling so the interior temperature stays comfortable whether the valley thermometer reads 35 degrees or 105 degrees.
Many Kingsburg homes - particularly those built in the 1950s through 1970s near the older downtown neighborhoods - have modest square footage and no dedicated family room. A sunroom addition built off the back of the house adds livable space without the complexity of a full interior remodel, and it works with the flat lots and single-story construction typical of this area.
Vinyl framing holds up exceptionally well in Kingsburg's dry, intense heat - it does not warp, crack, or need repainting the way wood frames do after years of Central Valley summers and the occasional freeze in winter. For homeowners who want a low-maintenance enclosure that stays looking clean without annual upkeep, vinyl is the right material choice here.
If your existing patio slab is in good condition, a conversion is one of the most cost-effective ways to add a livable room in Kingsburg. We inspect the slab first - the clay soils common in this area can cause cracking and uneven settling over time - and if it is structurally sound, we build directly on top of it, which shortens the timeline and keeps costs lower.
Kingsburg sits in the San Joaquin Valley, where summer temperatures regularly climb above 100 degrees from June through September, and triple-digit days are a normal part of the season - not an exception. A sunroom or enclosed patio room built without serious attention to glass performance, solar orientation, and cooling will be completely unusable for months at a time. Every project we build here starts with an honest conversation about how the room will actually perform on the hottest afternoons of the year, because that is the only test that matters in this climate. We specify low-E glass rated for this region and make sure every room has a proper cooling solution before a single wall goes up.
The soil under Kingsburg lots adds a second challenge that is easy to overlook but important to get right. The clay-heavy ground across the San Joaquin Valley shrinks during the long, dry summers and swells back when winter rains arrive - a seasonal cycle that puts real stress on concrete footings, slabs, and any connection point between a new room and an existing foundation. On top of that, many homes in Kingsburg were built in the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, which means the existing concrete may have already experienced years of this movement and needs a careful evaluation before we build on top of it. Getting the footing design right for these conditions requires specific experience with Central Valley soils, not just general construction knowledge.
Our crew works throughout Kingsburg regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The housing stock we see most often in Kingsburg is single-story construction on flat lots - older stucco or wood-sided homes near the historic downtown core along Draper Street, and newer tract-home subdivisions on the edges of town built in the 1990s and 2000s. Both types have distinct considerations: the older homes often have concrete that has seen decades of valley soil movement, while the newer subdivisions tend to have more consistent slab conditions but may have HOA requirements that affect what we can build and how it needs to look.
Kingsburg is easy to reach from our base in Clovis, sitting about 25 miles south on Highway 99. The city has its own permitting process through the City of Kingsburg, and we pull permits through that office regularly. Homes near the downtown Swedish Village area on Draper Street have some of the oldest construction in the city - buildings that date back to the early 1900s - and projects there sometimes require extra attention to the existing foundation before anything new gets attached.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Reedley and Selma, two neighboring communities along the Highway 99 corridor with similar housing stock and the same Central Valley climate conditions. If you are anywhere in this part of Fresno County and want a crew that works here regularly, give us a call.
We reply to all new inquiries within one business day. The first conversation is short - we want to know what you have in mind and what your property looks like before we book the site visit. No pressure, just enough information to make the appointment useful for both of us.
We come to your Kingsburg home, walk the existing patio or outdoor space, and evaluate the slab condition, sun exposure, and how the new room will connect to your existing structure. This is also where we talk through cost - we give you a written estimate before we leave, broken out so you can see exactly what you are paying for.
We handle the permit application with the City of Kingsburg and schedule the project to start once approval comes through. Construction typically runs four to eight weeks. You do not need to be home every day, but we will coordinate with you on the key inspection days.
When the room is complete, we walk through it with you before we consider the job done. We cover how the windows operate, how the cooling system works, and what maintenance to watch for in your first Kingsburg summer. Any punch list items get handled before we leave.
We serve Kingsburg homeowners with no-pressure estimates and permits handled for you. Call us or fill out the form and we will get back to you within one business day.
(559) 826-1896Kingsburg is a small city of roughly 12,000 people in Fresno County, situated about 25 miles south of Fresno along Highway 99. The city was founded in the 1890s by Swedish immigrants, and that heritage is still on display along Draper Street, where several buildings feature Swedish-style architectural details and signage. The annual Swedish Festival draws visitors from across the region and is one of the most recognizable events associated with the city. Beyond the downtown historic area, Kingsburg is primarily a residential community with single-family homes on flat valley lots, many of them owner-occupied by families who have lived here for years. The Kings River runs near the city and is a well-known local recreation spot for fishing and seasonal swimming.
The housing stock in Kingsburg spans a wide range of ages. Homes near the older downtown core date back to the early 1900s, while newer subdivisions on the north and east edges of town were built during the residential growth of the 1990s and 2000s. Most of the city is single-family detached construction on modest lots - stucco ranch homes from the postwar era make up a large share of the inventory, and many of them have concrete patios that have seen decades of San Joaquin Valley weather. Nearby Reedley is just a short drive east along the Kings River, and Selma is a few miles north on Highway 99 - both are communities we serve regularly with the same approach we bring to every Kingsburg job.
Call us or request a free estimate online - we serve Kingsburg and the surrounding Fresno County area and can usually schedule a site visit within a few days.