Premier Glendora Sunrooms & Patios is a licensed sunroom contractor serving La Verne, CA, specializing in custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and sunroom additions. We have served the eastern San Gabriel Valley since 2015 and pull every permit directly through the City of La Verne Building and Safety Department.

La Verne's mix of craftsman bungalows near downtown and newer two-story homes in the northern foothills means one-size-fits-all kits often do not work. A custom-designed room fits your lot, matches your roofline, and meets La Verne HOA design standards. See how we design custom sunrooms here.
Many La Verne ranch homes have existing backyard concrete slabs that are still in good condition and can serve as the foundation for a new sunroom. Building on an existing slab saves money and shortens the construction timeline considerably compared to starting from bare ground.
La Verne summers regularly reach the mid-90s, and an open covered patio quickly becomes unusable during July and August. Enclosing that space with glass and a proper seal lets you use it year-round and keeps wildfire smoke out during fall fire season.
La Verne's foothill location means cooler winter nights than communities farther south, making full insulation worthwhile rather than optional. A four season room with low-e glass and a mini-split stays comfortable from the first cold November night through the hottest July afternoon.
La Verne's UV exposure breaks down outdoor furniture and concrete surfaces faster than most homeowners expect. A solid patio cover protects your backyard investment and serves as the first phase if you decide to fully enclose the space in the future.
Older sunrooms in La Verne often have single-pane glass or aluminum frames that were fine in the 1980s but now leak heat and let in road noise. Remodeling with updated glazing and insulated panels can make an existing room comfortable and energy-efficient without a full tear-down.
La Verne's housing stock spans several different eras, and that mix matters for sunroom work. The streets nearest to the University of La Verne and historic downtown are lined with homes built before 1960, including craftsman bungalows and Spanish stucco designs that have original framing and older concrete. The northern edges of the city, closer to the foothills, contain newer two-story homes from the 1990s and 2000s that are now hitting the age where major updates are due. A contractor who works regularly in La Verne reads these differences quickly and sizes the job accordingly, rather than quoting every project the same way.
La Verne sits at roughly 1,000 feet of elevation at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains. That foothill position means more wind than flat communities to the south, clay soils that expand and contract with every wet and dry cycle, and hillside drainage patterns that can affect what happens around your foundation. Summer heat regularly exceeds 95 degrees, and the dry season is long enough to cause caulk and sealants to crack and shrink. A sunroom built for this environment needs fastening systems rated for wind, glazing that handles intense UV, and waterproofing that accounts for clay soil movement at the slab edges.
Our crew works throughout La Verne regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The homes nearest to Brackett Field Airport on the eastern edge of the city tend to be slightly newer than those near downtown, while the older streets around the university often have aging foundations that require a closer look before any addition is framed. Knowing which part of La Verne you live in helps us scope your project accurately from the first visit.
We pull permits through the City of La Verne and are familiar with what the plan check process requires here. La Verne's older residential streets include many homes with modified footprints or unusual lot configurations, and getting permit drawings right the first time avoids delays. White Avenue, D Street, and the neighborhoods east of Wheeler Avenue are areas our crews visit regularly.
We also serve nearby cities across the San Gabriel Valley. If you have neighbors in Claremont to the west, or friends in San Dimas just to the north, we cover those areas as part of our regular service territory.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. You do not need drawings or a detailed plan at this stage - a rough description of your project and your address is enough to get started.
We visit your La Verne property to assess the existing slab, roofline, and any HOA considerations. The assessment is no-cost, and we provide a written estimate that breaks down materials, labor, and permit fees so you can compare quotes without guessing at what is included.
Once you sign the contract, we prepare and submit permit drawings to the City of La Verne. Plan check review typically takes two to four weeks, and we handle all communication with the building department so you do not need to manage that process yourself.
Construction runs two to six weeks depending on room size and foundation requirements. We schedule work to minimize disruption and keep your yard accessible. The project closes with a final city inspection and a walkthrough with you to confirm everything is right before we call it done.
We serve La Verne homeowners throughout the city, from the historic streets near downtown to the foothill neighborhoods near the mountains. No pressure, no obligation - just a straight conversation about what your project needs.
(626) 640-8959La Verne is a city of around 32,000 residents in the eastern San Gabriel Valley, located at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains at roughly 1,000 feet of elevation. The city has a high rate of homeownership relative to many nearby communities, and residents tend to stay put for long periods. The neighborhoods closest to the University of La Verne and historic downtown contain some of the oldest homes in the city, with craftsman bungalows and Spanish-style stucco houses on wide tree-lined streets. Many of those properties have not had major work done in decades, and their owners are often investing in improvements that add real long-term value. You can learn more about the city at the La Verne Wikipedia article.
The northern parts of La Verne, toward the foothills, include newer subdivisions from the 1990s and 2000s on larger lots with two-story homes. These properties are now old enough that roofing, HVAC, and exterior systems are due for replacement or upgrade. Whether you live near the university, on one of the older ranch-home streets close to Foothill Boulevard, or up in the newer hillside neighborhoods, our team is familiar with La Verne's residential mix. Neighboring cities we serve regularly include Claremont to the west and San Dimas to the north.
Full-service sunroom construction from foundation to finishing touches.
Learn MoreWe serve La Verne homeowners from the historic downtown streets to the foothill neighborhoods near the mountains. Call today or submit your project details and we will get back to you within one business day.