
Clovis Sunrooms and Patios builds all season rooms, patio enclosures, and custom sunrooms for Madera homeowners - from older ranch houses near downtown to newer subdivisions on the north side - and we have served Fresno County since 2017, replying to every new inquiry within one business day.
Clovis Sunrooms and Patios builds all season rooms, patio enclosures, and custom sunrooms for Madera homeowners - from older ranch houses near downtown to newer subdivisions on the north side - and we have served Fresno County since 2017, replying to every new inquiry within one business day.

Madera summers push past 100 degrees and tule fog settles in for weeks every winter - a room that only works in mild weather will sit empty for months. Our all season rooms are fully insulated, climate-controlled, and built with glass ratings that handle the real-world heat load of a San Joaquin Valley summer, so the space is genuinely usable in July and January alike.
Many Madera homes built before 1990 have a concrete patio slab out back that sits exposed to the summer sun and valley dust. Enclosing that existing slab turns it into a shaded, protected room without the cost of digging a new foundation - and it is one of the most cost-effective ways to add usable space to a Madera property.
Madera has two very different home profiles - older ranch houses near downtown on larger lots, and newer two-story tract homes on the north side with tighter setbacks. A custom sunroom design accounts for those differences, matching the roofline, exterior finish, and footprint to your specific property rather than forcing a generic kit onto a house it does not fit.
For Madera homeowners who want to enjoy spring and fall evenings outdoors without the full investment of a climate-controlled room, a three season sunroom is a practical starting point. These rooms handle the mild shoulder months well and keep out insects and dust during the most comfortable weeks of the year.
Madera homes - particularly the pre-1980 ranch houses near downtown - tend to be modestly sized, and adding a sunroom is one of the most affordable ways to gain square footage without a major interior renovation. A rear addition that opens off the living room or kitchen fits cleanly onto the single-story floor plans common in this part of the city.
A well-built patio cover is the fastest way to make a Madera backyard usable from May through September. Blocking direct afternoon sun drops the concrete surface temperature enough to make outdoor dining and relaxing practical even in the hottest weeks of the season - a meaningful quality-of-life improvement for families spending time at home.
Madera sits in the San Joaquin Valley where summer temperatures routinely exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit and sometimes reach 110. That level of heat degrades building materials faster than most contractors account for - caulk dries out and cracks, low-quality glass turns a sunroom into an oven by mid-morning, and any gap in the building envelope lets hot air push straight in. A sunroom built for a moderate coastal climate will not perform well in Madera. We specify glass, framing, and HVAC for the actual heat load here, not for a national average, because a room that sits unused in July is not worth the investment.
Madera also has a significant portion of homes built before 1980, and those properties come with their own set of considerations. Older stucco exteriors may need patching before a new addition ties in. Slab foundations from that era may have moved over time due to the clay-heavy soils that underlie most of the Central Valley - soils that swell in wet winters and shrink in dry summers, putting ongoing stress on concrete. We assess existing conditions at the estimate visit and factor them into our approach before construction begins, rather than discovering problems after the foundation is already poured.
Our crew works throughout Madera regularly, and the two-part nature of the city's housing stock is something we factor into every job. Older ranch houses near downtown Madera and the Madera County Courthouse area tend to sit on larger lots with more open backyard space, which makes sunroom and patio enclosure work straightforward from a setback standpoint. The newer subdivisions on the north side of the city - the tract homes that have gone up over the past 20 years off roads like Avenue 12 and toward the Highway 99 corridor - tend to have tighter lot lines and two-story rooflines that require a different design approach when tying in an addition.
Madera is also the jumping-off point for Highway 41 heading toward Yosemite National Park, which means residents here know Central Valley weather well - the dry heat that builds from June through September and the tule fog that blankets the valley floor each December and January. We handle permits through the City of Madera Building Division and coordinate all inspections on your behalf.
We work regularly in Kerman to the southwest - another Fresno County agricultural city with similar housing stock - and in Fresno to the south. If your property sits near the edge of Madera toward either of those communities, we are still the right call.
We respond to every new inquiry within one business day. That first conversation covers your home, your backyard layout, and what you want to build - it takes about ten minutes and gives us enough to schedule an on-site visit.
We come to your Madera home, measure the space, check the existing slab and soil conditions, and walk through your design and budget options. You get a written estimate before we leave - no vague price ranges, no surprises when the bill arrives.
After you approve the design, we file the permit application with the City of Madera and schedule construction to start once the permit is issued. You do not need to manage the building department - we handle scheduling and inspection coordination from start to finish.
When construction wraps up, we walk through the finished room with you, confirm all required inspections are passed, and make sure you are satisfied before we close out the job. Most Madera projects take three to seven weeks of active construction.
We serve all of Madera and respond within one business day. Whether your home is near downtown or out on the north side, we know the area and we are ready to help.
(559) 826-1896Madera is a city of about 67,000 people in Madera County, sitting in the heart of the San Joaquin Valley surrounded by vineyards, almond orchards, and peach farms that make this one of California's top agricultural counties. The city has two distinct neighborhoods in terms of housing stock: the older sections near downtown and along Highway 99, where single-story ranch homes on larger lots were built from the 1950s through the 1980s, and the newer north side subdivisions that have grown steadily since the early 2000s with two-story tract homes on more compact lots. The historic Madera County Courthouse on Yosemite Avenue is one of the most recognizable landmarks in the city and sits near the older residential streets that many long-time Madera homeowners call home.
Madera is well positioned along Highway 41, the main route north to Yosemite National Park, which gives the city a broader regional identity beyond just the valley floor. Residents here are accustomed to long, dry summers and foggy winters - and the homes reflect it, with stucco exteriors and concrete slabs that handle the climate but also need periodic maintenance as soil movement and sun exposure take their toll over the years. We also serve nearby Kerman to the southwest and Fresno to the south, so homeowners throughout this part of the Central Valley are familiar with our work.
Call us today or send a message and we will respond within one business day. We serve all of Madera and the surrounding San Joaquin Valley communities.