SunGallery Menifee Sunrooms & Patios brings custom sunroom design, patio enclosures, and four season rooms to Temecula, CA homeowners. We navigate the valley's HOA-heavy planned communities, pull permits through the City of Temecula, and design every room to stay comfortable in the inland heat - with 1-business-day response on all inquiries.

Temecula homes range from newer tract subdivisions with active HOAs to larger hillside lots and wine country properties with different structural and design needs. The services below reflect what actually matters in this market.
Temecula's hillside lots, wine country estates, and HOA-governed planned communities each come with different site conditions - thoughtful sunroom design from the start means the final room fits both the property and the neighborhood approval process.
Learn more about sunroom designTemecula's valley location brings both triple-digit summer heat and occasional winter frost - a four season room with a mini-split cooling and heating unit keeps the space usable year-round in a way that a screened porch or basic enclosure cannot.
From wine country estates off Rancho California Road to newer subdivisions in Harveston and Wolf Creek, Temecula homes vary widely in scale and style - a custom room built to match the home's architecture holds value better than an off-the-shelf kit.
Most Temecula homes have an existing concrete patio slab, and an enclosure makes use of that existing foundation rather than starting from scratch - a cost-effective path to a closed room that also adds insulation value against the valley's temperature swings.
Temecula evenings from April through October are genuinely pleasant, but wind-blown dust and insects are a consistent nuisance - a screen room lets you sit outside comfortably without fighting either, and it carries no cooling load to manage.
Before enclosing a room entirely, many Temecula homeowners start with a covered patio to see how the space gets used - a well-designed patio cover is also easier to get past most HOA committees than a full room addition.
Temecula sits in an inland valley that channels heat in summer and cold air in winter. Temperatures regularly climb past 95 degrees from June through September, and UV exposure at this elevation and distance from the coast is intense enough to fade and crack materials that would hold up fine on the coast. A sunroom built with standard window glass and no dedicated cooling becomes an unusable room for four months of the year. Glass specification and climate control are design decisions that cannot be corrected cheaply after construction - they need to be part of the original plan. The city's clay soils add another layer of complexity: seasonal swelling and shrinking puts stress on any slab that was not designed to accommodate that movement.
A large share of Temecula's neighborhoods are master-planned communities governed by homeowners associations - Redhawk, Paloma del Sol, Harveston, Crowne Hill, and Wolf Creek all have active HOA design review processes. Exterior additions require written HOA approval before a city permit can be filed in most of these communities. Contractors unfamiliar with this process regularly submit permit applications before HOA approval is secured, which creates timeline conflicts and sometimes forces a restart of the city review. Beyond the HOA factor, properties in hillside areas like Crowne Hill and Morgan Hill involve sloped lots, retaining walls, and drainage considerations that flat Harveston lots do not - and a contractor who quotes both lots identically has not looked at either one carefully enough.
Our crew works throughout Temecula regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We file permits with the City of Temecula's Building and Safety Division and track applications through the review process, which typically runs three to six weeks depending on project complexity and current volume. We have worked on homes across Temecula's terrain - from flat lots in Paloma del Sol and Harveston to the sloped hillside pads in Crowne Hill where drainage and retaining wall conditions vary significantly from one property to the next.
Temecula is known for its wine country along Rancho California Road and for Old Town, the original downtown along Front Street that draws visitors from across the region. Most of the city's residential neighborhoods spread east and south of Interstate 15, connected by Winchester Road in the north and Temecula Parkway (Highway 79) in the south. We service homes throughout this corridor, from the neighborhoods near the Promenade Temecula mall to the larger estate lots in the De Luz area west of the freeway.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Murrieta to the north, where many of the same HOA patterns and soil conditions apply. For homeowners in the unincorporated communities between Temecula and Lake Elsinore, we also work regularly throughout Wildomar.
Contact us by phone or through the online form. We reply within 1 business day to schedule a free in-home visit - you do not need drawings or final decisions in place, just an idea of what you want to do with the space.
We visit your Temecula property, evaluate your existing slab and lot conditions, and walk through size, glass, cooling, and budget options. We note any HOA requirements and permit considerations so you see the full timeline before any cost is committed.
You receive a detailed written estimate. For properties in Redhawk, Paloma del Sol, Harveston, or similar communities, we help prepare HOA submission materials - HOA review is completed before the city permit application is submitted.
Once permits are in hand, we schedule your build date and complete foundation, framing, glass, electrical, and finish work in sequence. A City of Temecula inspector signs off at the end, and we walk through the completed room with you before we close the project.
We serve Temecula homeowners from our local office. No-pressure estimates, clear timelines, and permits handled from start to finish.
(951) 618-2116Temecula was incorporated as a city in 1989 and has grown into one of Southwest Riverside County's largest communities, with a population of roughly 110,000 as of the 2020 Census. The city is best known outside the region for its wine country - more than 40 wineries line Rancho California Road west of the freeway - and for Old Town Temecula, the original historic downtown along Front Street with buildings dating to the late 1800s. Most of the city's residential neighborhoods were built out between 1990 and 2010, which means a large share of the housing stock is now 15 to 35 years old - old enough for exterior finishes, roofs, and outdoor structures to need serious attention.
Temecula's neighborhoods spread across varied terrain. Redhawk, Paloma del Sol, Harveston, and Wolf Creek are flat-to-rolling planned communities in the south and east. Crowne Hill and Morgan Hill sit on higher ground with larger lots and hillside pads. The De Luz area west of the I-15 has estate-sized parcels with acreage. That mix of housing types, lot conditions, and HOA governance structures makes Temecula one of the more complex markets in the region for any contractor doing exterior work. We also serve homeowners in adjacent Murrieta to the north, where the building stock is similar and the same HOA-first process applies.
Serving Temecula from Rancho California Road to Wolf Creek - call us or submit the contact form and we will get back to you within 1 business day.
We have worked on projects in Redhawk, Paloma del Sol, Wolf Creek, and other Temecula planned communities and know what each HOA committee typically needs to approve a sunroom addition. Starting the HOA process correctly the first time saves weeks compared to resubmitting a rejected application.
Temecula's valley location means intense afternoon heat with no marine layer to moderate it. We spec low solar heat gain glass and right-sized cooling as standard features on every enclosed room - not optional add-ons - because a room built without them will not be used from June through September.
Temecula's clay soils expand and contract with the seasons, and hillside lots add drainage and grading complexity. We assess your specific lot before recommending a foundation approach - a step that prevents the cracking and shifting that shows up two or three years down the road in rooms built without it.
We file directly with the City of Temecula's Building and Safety Division and track the application through review. Knowing the current permit review window upfront lets us build a realistic construction schedule - so the timeline we give you at the estimate is the one we actually hit.
Temecula's combination of HOA governance, clay soils, hillside terrain, and inland heat puts a premium on contractors who understand the full picture before quoting. We do not treat every lot in the city as the same job, because they are not - and that difference shows up in finished rooms that work the way homeowners expected them to.