
Yorba Linda Sunrooms & Patios is a licensed sunroom contractor serving Buena Park, CA, with screen room installation, patio enclosures, and full sunroom additions tailored to the city's postwar ranch homes.
We have been building in this part of Orange County since 2016, and we reply to every new inquiry within one business day.

Buena Park summers push temperatures into the 90s from June through September, making an unscreened patio unusable for months at a time. A screen room on your existing ranch-home slab gives you a shaded, bug-free outdoor space without the cost of a full glass enclosure - learn more about our screen room installation service.
Many Buena Park ranch homes have original concrete patios poured in the 1950s and 1960s that are structurally sound but completely exposed. Enclosing that slab turns an underused outdoor slab into a protected living space without the cost of pouring a new foundation.
Buena Park homeowners often want more living space without moving - and sunroom additions are one of the most cost-effective ways to add it. The city's consistent sunshine and mild winters mean a well-insulated sunroom gets used year-round, not just seasonally.
Buena Park's mild coastal-influenced climate means three season rooms are genuinely usable for most of the year. If you are looking for a comfortable outdoor space without the investment of full HVAC, a three season room built on your existing patio slab is a practical fit for most postwar lots here.
A solid or lattice patio cover drops the heat load on your Buena Park backyard significantly during the long summer. Santa Ana winds that hit this northwest corner of Orange County each fall put real stress on any cover, so proper anchoring into the home's structural framing is critical on every job here.
Vinyl frames hold up well under Buena Park's intense UV exposure - they do not fade, peel, or require the seasonal repainting that wood does. For homeowners on the lower-maintenance side, vinyl is a good match for this climate and the stucco-exterior ranch homes that make up most of the city's housing stock.
Most of Buena Park was built out between 1950 and 1970, which means the typical home here is 55 to 75 years old. The concrete patios, driveways, and flatwork on those properties are often original - meaning they have been through decades of Santa Ana wind events, clay soil movement, and Southern California sun. When you anchor a screen room or sunroom to a slab that old, a contractor needs to assess the concrete first rather than assuming it will hold. We check every slab before framing begins, and we flag problems before they become mid-project surprises.
Buena Park sits in the northwest corner of Orange County, where the city catches the edge of coastal marine influence in summer and the full force of Santa Ana winds in fall. Those winds - which regularly gust past 50 mph along the Beach Boulevard corridor and the neighborhoods near La Palma - mean any patio structure needs to be framed into the actual structural framing of your house, not just the stucco surface. The clay soils underlying most of the city also shift seasonally, which is why older concrete flatwork here shows more cracking and unevenness than newer suburban developments to the south.
Our crew works throughout Buena Park regularly, and the permits for this city come through the City of Buena Park Building and Safety Division. Most of the homes we work on here are single-story ranch houses in the 5,000 to 7,500 square foot lot range - tight but workable, and almost all of them have original concrete patios in the backyard that are in decent shape despite their age.
Buena Park is easy to navigate from the 5 and 91 freeways, and most of our jobs here are clustered in the residential neighborhoods off Beach Boulevard and Orangethorpe Avenue - a couple of miles from Knott's Berry Farm in either direction. The housing stock is consistent enough that we rarely encounter surprises, but we still walk every slab and check every anchor point before giving a quote.
We also work regularly in neighboring Anaheim to the southeast, and in Fullerton to the east - both share similar postwar housing profiles and the same permit-first approach we use in Buena Park.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We ask a few basic questions about your home and what you have in mind so we can come prepared.
We visit your property, walk the patio area, and assess the existing concrete. This is also when we discuss cost ranges honestly - there are no high-pressure tactics, just a clear picture of what the job involves and what it will likely cost.
We prepare and submit the permit application to Buena Park Building and Safety on your behalf. Plan review typically takes two to four weeks, and we schedule your build start date once approval is in hand.
Crew arrives on the scheduled date and completes the framing, screen or glass installation, and any finish work. We do a final walkthrough with you before we leave so you can confirm everything looks and functions as expected.
We serve all of Buena Park - from the neighborhoods near Beach Boulevard to the quiet streets along the La Palma border. No pressure. Free estimate.
(657) 366-2795Buena Park covers about 10.5 square miles in the northwest corner of Orange County, home to roughly 82,000 residents. The city is most recognizable for Knott's Berry Farm on Beach Boulevard - one of the oldest theme parks in the United States - but most of the city is composed of quiet, fully built-out residential neighborhoods that were developed rapidly after World War II. According to Wikipedia's overview of Buena Park, the city is bordered by Anaheim to the southeast, Fullerton to the east, and Cerritos to the north - a location that puts it at the intersection of several distinct Orange and Los Angeles County communities.
The housing stock here is one of the most consistent in the region: single-story ranch homes with stucco exteriors, attached garages, and concrete patios, most built between 1950 and 1970. Owner-occupancy rates are notably high for a dense Southern California suburb, which means residents here tend to invest in maintaining their homes rather than deferring work. Homeowners in Buena Park who are looking at sunroom and screen room projects are often doing so in parallel with other updates to homes that have aged well but never been significantly remodeled. Our neighbors in La Habra to the northeast share a similar housing profile, and we work there regularly as well.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreTurn your deck into a beautiful, weather-protected sunroom retreat.
Learn MoreWe serve all of Buena Park and reply within one business day. Call us or fill out the form to get started.