SunGallery Menifee Sunrooms & Patios builds patio-to-sunroom conversions, enclosed patios, and four season rooms across Wildomar, CA. We handle permits through the City of Wildomar, account for hillside lot and fire hazard zone conditions, and design every room to hold up to the area's heat and Santa Ana winds - with 1-business-day response on all inquiries.

Most Wildomar homes were built between 1990 and 2010 and sit on a mix of flat suburban lots and sloped hillside pads. The services below are chosen around what that housing stock - and that climate - actually requires.
Most Wildomar homes built in the 1990s and 2000s already have a concrete patio slab - converting that existing space into an enclosed room avoids the cost of new foundation work and makes use of structure that is already there.
Learn more about patio-to-sunroom conversionWildomar's inland location means cold enough winter mornings to make an unheated enclosure uncomfortable and hot enough summers to make a cooling-free room unusable - a four season room with a mini-split handles both ends of that range.
For homeowners who want to extend outdoor living without full climate control, a three season room with screened panels and a ceiling fan covers most of Wildomar's shoulder-season weather from March through May and September through November.
Wildomar evenings in spring and fall are some of the best outdoor weather in Southwest Riverside County - a screen room keeps wind-blown dust and insects out while the cooler air moves freely through the space.
An all season room with full insulation, proper glass, and a dedicated HVAC unit turns a Wildomar patio into a room that gets used every month of the year, not just when the weather cooperates - especially useful on hillside lots where the backyard may not have natural shade.
A covered patio is often the practical first step before a full enclosure in Wildomar - it provides shade through the brutal summer months and makes the space usable while a homeowner decides whether a full conversion makes sense for their property.
Wildomar only became its own city in 2008, and its housing stock is heavily concentrated in homes built between 1990 and 2010. That age range means roofs, exterior finishes, and outdoor structures are arriving at or past their typical service life at the same time - and the climate here accelerates that aging. Summer temperatures regularly hit the mid-90s to low 100s, and the intense UV exposure that comes with Wildomar's inland location breaks down caulk, paint, and roofing materials faster than in coastal areas. Any enclosed room addition that does not account for heat and UV in its glass and framing specifications will show premature wear within a few years.
The city's terrain adds another set of considerations. A meaningful share of Wildomar's neighborhoods sit on hillside lots where grading, drainage, and retaining wall conditions affect how a foundation needs to be designed. Santa Ana winds, which regularly gust past 50 mph in fall and winter, put real lateral load on any structure attached to the house - and parts of the city fall within designated fire hazard severity zones under California's fire hazard mapping by CAL FIRE, which can require ignition-resistant materials on new additions. A contractor who treats a Wildomar hillside lot the same as a flat lot in a neighboring city is not quoting from a real understanding of the work.
Our crew works throughout Wildomar regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We file permits with the City of Wildomar's Building Department and follow applications through review. We have worked on homes across the city's range of terrain - from the flat streets near Marna O'Brien Park in the western part of the city to the hillside neighborhoods east of the I-15 where lot grades and drainage require more planning before any outdoor work begins.
Wildomar sits between Temecula to the south and Lake Elsinore to the north, with Interstate 15 running along the western edge of the city. Most of the city's residents use that corridor every day for commutes to Temecula, the Inland Empire, or San Diego County. The city is largely residential in character - no major commercial center of its own - with neighborhoods spread across Clinton Keith Road, Palomar Street, and the hillside roads east of the freeway.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Canyon Lake to the southwest, where the gated community setting brings its own set of HOA and permit considerations. For homeowners to the north, we work throughout Lake Elsinore as well.
Contact us by phone or through the online form. We reply within 1 business day to set up a free on-site visit in Wildomar - no drawings or decisions needed ahead of time, just a general idea of what you want to do with the space.
We visit your Wildomar property, evaluate the existing patio or outdoor structure, and assess lot conditions including slope, drainage, and any fire hazard zone requirements for your address. We walk through size, glass, cooling, and budget options before any cost is presented.
You receive a detailed written estimate with itemized costs. Once you approve it, we prepare and submit the permit application to the City of Wildomar's Building Department - you do not need to manage that process yourself.
Once permits are approved, we schedule your build start, complete all foundation, framing, glass, and finish work in sequence, and arrange the city final inspection. We walk through the completed room with you before we close the job.
We serve Wildomar homeowners with on-site estimates, clear timelines, and permits handled from start to finish - call us or fill out the form.
(951) 618-2116Wildomar incorporated as a city in 2008, making it one of the newest cities in California. It sits in the Inland Valley of Riverside County, bordered by Temecula to the south and Lake Elsinore to the north. The population has grown to roughly 38,000 residents, most of them in owner-occupied single-family homes. The housing stock is concentrated in neighborhoods built during the 1990s and 2000s - stucco exteriors, tile roofs, and attached two-car garages are standard throughout the city. With most of these homes now 15 to 35 years old, exterior maintenance and room additions have become active concerns for a growing share of homeowners.
The city has a mix of flat suburban streets in its western portion and hillside neighborhoods with larger lots on its eastern side. Marna O'Brien Park is the city's main community gathering space, and the I-15 corridor along the western edge of town serves as the daily commute route for most residents heading to Temecula, the Inland Empire, or San Diego County. The city's semi-rural character - more open land and fewer commercial corridors than neighboring cities - means some properties have horse easements, larger parcels, and setback conditions that affect outdoor construction planning. We also serve neighboring Canyon Lake to the southwest, which, like Wildomar, involves working within a community with its own specific approval requirements for exterior additions.
Serving Wildomar from the flat neighborhoods near the I-15 to the hillside streets on the east side - call us or submit the contact form and we will reply within 1 business day.
A significant share of Wildomar's properties sit on sloped lots with grading, drainage, and retaining wall conditions that flat-lot projects do not have. We evaluate your specific site before recommending a foundation approach - a step that prevents the cracking, settling, and drainage failures that show up later on hillside rooms that were not properly planned.
Wildomar summers push into the 90s and low 100s, and Santa Ana wind events regularly gust past 50 mph in fall and winter. We spec low solar heat gain glass and properly rated framing connections as standard on every project here - not upgrades - because Wildomar's climate loads are different from coastal conditions.
Parts of Wildomar fall within designated fire hazard severity zones under California's WUI code. We identify your address's hazard zone status at the assessment stage and specify materials accordingly - ignition-resistant materials and ember-resistant venting where required - so there are no compliance surprises during the permit review.
We submit permit applications to the City of Wildomar's Building Department and follow the application through review. Knowing the current review window upfront lets us give you a realistic construction start date from the beginning, rather than revising the timeline after the permit comes back.
Wildomar is a smaller city than its neighbors, but it comes with its own combination of climate loads, terrain variation, and fire hazard considerations that make local knowledge matter. We bring the same level of site-specific assessment to a Wildomar hillside lot that we would to any project in the region, and we do not quote from a template.