Yorba Linda Sunrooms & Patios is a licensed sunroom contractor serving Orange, CA with custom sunrooms, four season additions, and patio enclosures. From the pre-1940 Craftsman and Victorian homes near Old Towne to the mid-century ranch houses throughout the rest of the city, we walk every property in person before quoting - because the age and style of your home changes the scope of the work.

No two homes in Orange look quite alike - the range from 1890s Victorians in Old Towne to 1970s stucco ranch houses on the west side requires a custom approach to every project. Our custom sunrooms are designed to match the architecture of your specific home, so the addition looks like it was always there rather than something attached after the fact.
Orange sees over 280 sunny days a year, but south- and west-facing rooms built with standard glass will overheat from May through September. A fully insulated four season sunroom with properly rated glazing gives Orange homeowners a usable, climate-controlled room in every month - not just the mild ones.
The mid-century ranch homes that make up a large share of Orange's housing stock commonly have a rear covered patio that is now 50 to 70 years old and showing its age. Enclosing that existing covered space is often the most direct and cost-effective way to add a usable room, especially when the existing concrete slab can serve as the foundation.
Orange sits close enough to open hillside areas near the Anaheim Hills and Santiago Canyon to experience smoke and poor air quality during fall Santa Ana wind events. A sealed, insulated all season room lets Orange homeowners stay comfortable and keep outdoor air out on the days when conditions outside are at their worst.
For Orange homeowners who want to add living space without a full interior remodel, a sunroom addition on a rear or side yard is one of the more practical options. Homes here carry median values approaching $800,000, and a well-built, permitted addition protects that equity and gives future buyers a room they will actually want.
Some Orange properties, particularly the older homes near Chapman Avenue and the university corridor, have existing enclosures from the 1990s that now have fogged glass, failing seals, or roofline issues. We remodel these existing structures to current standards, which is typically far less expensive than tearing down and starting over.
Orange was incorporated in 1888, and the city carries one of the oldest and most varied housing stocks in Orange County. Old Towne Orange alone contains hundreds of Craftsman bungalows, Victorian cottages, and Spanish Colonial Revival homes built before 1940 - many still with original wood siding, single-pane windows, and roofing materials that are well past their design life. The city actively protects these homes through its historic preservation program, which means exterior additions on contributing structures need to be compatible with the original architecture. Outside of Old Towne, the majority of Orange's housing was built between the 1950s and 1970s - single-story stucco ranch houses on modest lots that now have aging concrete flatwork, original roofing, and covered patios ready to be enclosed.
The clay soils found across much of Orange County shift significantly between wet and dry seasons, and that movement is a leading cause of concrete cracking and uneven slabs throughout Orange. The same soils that heave a driveway can put stress on an older foundation, which is why a proper site assessment before any sunroom work matters here. Orange also sees strong Santa Ana wind events each fall, with gusts that can exceed 60 mph and regularly damage roofing and patio structures. A sunroom built in Orange needs glass, seals, and anchoring designed for these conditions - not just for sunny spring afternoons.
Our crew works throughout Orange regularly, and the range of housing stock we encounter here is wider than almost anywhere else in our service area. A pre-1940 Craftsman bungalow near The Circle in Old Towne has fundamentally different foundation conditions, roofline geometry, and exterior material requirements than a 1965 stucco ranch house in the western part of the city near Chapman Avenue. We assess every property in person before quoting because the scope of work on an older Orange home is not something you can estimate reliably without seeing the structure.
We are familiar with the City of Orange permit process and handle applications as part of our standard project workflow. Homeowners with properties in or near the historic district should ask us about the additional review steps that apply to exterior additions on contributing structures - it adds time to the pre-construction phase, and it is better to know that upfront. Chapman University sits at the center of the city next to Old Towne, and the neighborhoods spreading out toward Santiago Canyon Road to the east have a noticeably different character - newer homes, larger lots, and hillside exposure. We work in both parts of Orange and know what each requires. Neighboring Villa Park shares Orange's eastern border and has some of the same hillside exposure and clay soil conditions.
The junction of the 5, 22, and 57 freeways makes Orange easy to reach from across the county, and our crew regularly moves between Orange and the nearby cities we serve. To the north, Anaheim shares many of the same mid-century housing types. If you are in the northern part of Orange near Katella Avenue or the Stadium District, you may be just a few minutes from neighbors we have worked with in Anaheim.
Call or send a message through the contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We ask a few quick questions about your home - its age, the space you have in mind, and whether it is in or near Old Towne - so the site visit covers the right ground.
We visit your property to assess the existing structure, slab, roofline, and any historic preservation considerations before giving you any numbers. For older Orange homes, this step is essential - we do not quote without seeing the property. You will receive a written estimate within a week of the visit.
We handle the permit application with the City of Orange and manage the review process. Plan for three to five weeks before construction can begin - longer if a historic preservation review applies to your property. A reputable contractor handles this step as a standard part of the job.
The physical build runs two to six weeks. City inspectors check the work at required stages, which your contractor schedules and manages. We do a final walkthrough with you when the project is complete and the permit is formally closed out.
We serve all of Orange, CA - from the historic homes near Old Towne to the ranch neighborhoods west of the 55. Get an estimate that reflects your actual property, not a generic price range.
(657) 366-2795Orange is a mid-size city of about 140,000 residents in the heart of Orange County, incorporated in 1888 and best known to most Southern California residents for Old Towne Orange - the historic traffic circle at Chapman Avenue and Glassell Street surrounded by antique shops, restaurants, and pre-1940 homes that make up one of the largest collections of intact pre-war residential architecture in Southern California. Chapman University sits right next to Old Towne and is one of the most visible institutions in the city. About 55% of housing units in Orange are owner-occupied, which means more than half of the city's homes belong to people who have a direct interest in protecting and improving their property. Median home values approach $800,000, and homeowners here regularly invest in improvements that hold that value.
Outside of Old Towne, the character of Orange shifts toward postwar and mid-century residential streets. The neighborhoods west of the 55 freeway near Chapman Avenue and Katella Avenue have a dense mix of single-family homes and multi-family buildings, while the eastern edge of the city near Santiago Canyon Road has newer developments with larger lots and hillside views. Orange borders several cities our crew works in regularly. To the north, Anaheim shares much of the same mid-century housing stock and fall wind exposure. To the east, Villa Park is an enclave of larger properties that often call for custom work and careful design integration - much like the historic homes in Old Towne.
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