SunGallery Menifee Sunrooms & Patios builds sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Moreno Valley homeowners - specified for triple-digit summers, clay soil movement, and the tract homes built across this city between 1980 and 2005. We reply within 1 business day and every estimate is written with no obligation.

Moreno Valley is a large city with a diverse mix of housing ages, lot sizes, and neighborhood conditions. The services below are the ones that fit this market best - matched to the clay soil, intense summer heat, and production-built homes that define most of the residential stock here.
Moreno Valley homes built between 1980 and 2005 have the lot depth and existing slab footprints to support a purpose-built sunroom addition without major grading work. A new addition adds conditioned square footage that shows up in an appraisal - one of the most tangible improvements available for homes at this stage of their age cycle.
Explore our sunroom additionsMany Moreno Valley backyards have a concrete patio slab from the original builder that provides a ready-made platform for enclosure work. Converting an existing slab into an enclosed patio room is often more cost-effective than a full addition and takes less construction time - a good fit for homeowners who want added living space without a full renovation.
With summer highs regularly above 100 degrees and occasional winter frost, Moreno Valley needs a room that handles both ends of the temperature range. A four season sunroom with low-SHGC glass and a mini-split system gives you a comfortable, usable space in every month of the year - not just the mild ones.
Moreno Valley evenings in spring and fall are genuinely pleasant, but the Inland Empire basin brings wind-blown dust and insects that make sitting outside less comfortable than it should be. A screen room blocks debris and pests while keeping airflow open - no cooling required, and a fraction of the cost of an enclosed room.
An enclosed patio room is a step up from a screen room but a step below a full climate-controlled addition. For Moreno Valley homeowners who want to expand usable living space without the cost of full insulation and HVAC, it fills the gap - especially in neighborhoods like Sunnymead where lots allow for a generous footprint.
A patio cover does double duty in Moreno Valley: it cuts solar heat gain on the back wall of the house and creates a shaded outdoor area that is usable even in July. It also gives you a structural roof platform if you decide to enclose the space later - a logical first step when you are not ready for a full enclosure project.
Moreno Valley sits roughly 60 miles east of Los Angeles in the Inland Empire, where summer temperatures regularly climb above 100 degrees Fahrenheit and the Pacific marine layer that cools coastal communities never reaches. The intense UV exposure at this inland elevation degrades exterior caulk, stucco, and roofing materials faster than most homeowners expect. A patio enclosure or sunroom built with standard residential glazing will be genuinely uncomfortable in summer - not just warm - unless the room is designed from the start with low solar heat gain glass and a properly sized cooling system. Winters in Moreno Valley do occasionally drop below freezing, which reinforces the value of planning climate control as part of the original room design rather than adding it afterward at a higher cost.
Soil conditions add a second critical variable that rarely appears on a standard contractor estimate. Most of Moreno Valley sits on expansive clay soils that absorb winter moisture and swell, then contract significantly through the dry summer. That cycle of movement is the primary reason concrete driveways, patios, and foundations crack across this city over time. Any sunroom or patio enclosure needs a foundation design that accounts for this movement - especially on lots near the older Sunnymead corridor or in the eastern Rancho Belago neighborhoods where soil profiles vary. The city's housing stock ranges from homes built in the early 1980s near the March Air Reserve Base to the larger two-story homes built in the 2000s on the east side, and each era comes with different starting conditions that require their own assessment before design begins.
Our crew works throughout Moreno Valley regularly and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The city is one of the largest in Riverside County, and the residential neighborhoods spread from the older streets near March Air Reserve Base on the west side out to the newer Rancho Belago planned community on the east. Perris Boulevard and Alessandro Boulevard are the main north-south corridors we use to reach properties across the city, and most of our jobs here are on single-family homes in the subdivisions that fill in between those roads.
The housing stock we see most often in Moreno Valley is single-story and two-story stucco tract homes built in the 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s. These homes tend to have modest backyards with existing concrete patio slabs - a practical starting point for enclosure or screen room work that keeps project scope and cost predictable. On the Rancho Belago side of the city, homes are larger and newer, with bigger lots and more concrete flatwork that often supports a more substantial addition footprint.
We serve homeowners in Eastvale to the northwest and Perris to the south as well. If your property is anywhere in this corridor and you want to talk through a project, we respond to every inquiry within 1 business day.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form. We respond within 1 business day to schedule your free in-home consultation. You do not need final decisions before we talk - just a general idea of what you want to do with the space.
We visit your Moreno Valley property, evaluate the existing slab or outdoor area, and review site conditions including soil type and drainage. The estimate we give you reflects what the project actually requires at your specific address - not a generic number.
You receive a detailed written estimate covering all labor and materials before anything is signed. We file the City of Moreno Valley building permit application and track it through review so you do not have to.
Once permits are approved, our crew handles foundation work, framing, glazing, electrical, and finish work in sequence. A city inspector signs off at completion and we do a final walkthrough with you before closing out the project.
We serve Moreno Valley homeowners from the west side near March Air Reserve Base to the newer streets in Rancho Belago. Every estimate is written, itemized, and free.
(951) 618-2116Moreno Valley is one of the largest cities in Riverside County, with a population of roughly 210,000 people spread across a broad valley surrounded by the San Bernardino Mountains to the north and rolling hills to the south. The city grew rapidly from the early 1980s through the mid-2000s as affordable housing drew families from Los Angeles and Orange County, and that growth is visible in the streetscape: single-family stucco tract homes on modest lots, a few distinct neighborhood eras defined by when they were built. The western side of the city, near the historic March Air Reserve Base, has some of the oldest housing in town, while the eastern Rancho Belago neighborhood represents a newer, more planned community with larger lots and two-story homes built in the 2000s. The Sunnymead corridor along Alessandro Boulevard is the main commercial spine connecting those two halves.
Most of the homeowners we work with in Moreno Valley are first or second owners of homes that were built between 1985 and 2005. Those homes are now at an age where roofing, concrete flatwork, and outdoor living infrastructure are commonly due for upgrade or replacement. The city sits at roughly 1,600 feet elevation in an inland basin, which gives it hotter summers than coastal Southern California and occasional winter frost - conditions that accelerate wear on anything exposed to the outdoors. Neighboring Perris shares a similar housing profile just to the south, and the two cities see many of the same project types. Moreno Valley is also within easy reach of Lake Perris State Recreation Area, which draws residents out on weekends and reinforces the area's outdoor-living culture.
Get a free written estimate for your sunroom, patio enclosure, or screen room project in Moreno Valley. We respond within 1 business day.