
Hemet Sunrooms and Patios is your local sunroom contractor in Beaumont, CA, building four season sunrooms, patio enclosures, and vinyl sunrooms in Sundance, Tournament Hills, Fairway Canyon, and neighborhoods throughout the city.
We respond to new inquiries within one business day and handle the City of Beaumont permit process start to finish - so you never have to navigate building department paperwork on your own.
Beaumont sits at 2,500 feet where summer temperatures push into the high 90s and winter nights regularly drop below freezing - a standard three season room simply does not perform in this climate. Four season sunrooms with solar-control glazing and connected climate control give Beaumont homeowners a space that stays usable in July heat and December cold alike, without the energy waste of unconditioned glass boxes.
Most Beaumont tract homes in Sundance and Tournament Hills were built with a covered concrete patio that catches dust and debris every time the San Gorgonio Pass wind picks up. Enclosing that slab with glass and screen panels gives you a protected outdoor living space without digging a new foundation, which keeps the cost and timeline manageable.
At 2,500 feet elevation, UV intensity in Beaumont is higher than at sea level, which means wood frames bleach, dry out, and crack faster than homeowners expect. Vinyl framing holds its color and dimensional stability under prolonged sun and the wide daily temperature swings this area gets, with no painting or sealing required over time.
Beaumont's new developments like Fairway Canyon draw families who want additional living space without the cost of a full addition. An all season room with insulated panels and a mini-split unit adds a conditioned room to the floor plan at a fraction of the cost of conventional square footage, and it works year-round in this climate.
Many Beaumont neighborhoods have HOA oversight, including communities in Sundance and Fairway Canyon, which require exterior modifications to match architectural guidelines. We work through the design phase with the homeowner's HOA requirements in mind so approvals go smoothly and the finished room matches the rest of the home.
For Beaumont homeowners who primarily want to use their outdoor space in spring, fall, and mild winter months, a three season room with screened panels and a solid roof covers most of the year at a lower upfront cost. The design can be upgraded to a fully enclosed four season configuration later if needs change.
Beaumont occupies an unusual climate position for a Southern California city. At 2,500 feet elevation in the San Gorgonio Pass, the city gets stronger UV exposure than coastal areas, wider daily temperature swings than the flat Inland Empire, and some of the most sustained wind in the entire region. The rows of wind turbines visible from Interstate 10 are not a scenic feature - they are there because this corridor captures some of the most consistent high-wind conditions in California. A sunroom or patio enclosure built for Beaumont needs to be engineered for those conditions. Standard residential framing connections and typical glazing products are not designed for sustained 50-mph wind events, and they show it over time through loose seals, fogged glass, and shifted framing.
Most homes in Beaumont were built between 2000 and 2020 during the city's rapid growth period, in master-planned communities like Sundance, Tournament Hills, and Fairway Canyon. These are production tract homes with stucco exteriors and concrete tile roofs, built quickly on graded terrain. While they are newer than housing stock in neighboring cities, they are reaching the 15-to-20-year mark where exterior finishes, slab flatwork, and patio structures start showing the effects of the climate. Before any sunroom or enclosure project, we inspect the existing concrete slab for cracking and settling - the graded hillside lots common in Beaumont's newer developments can shift over time as soils compact. An unstable base corrected before construction prevents alignment and leak problems in the finished room.
Our crew works throughout Beaumont regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Beaumont Building Division on every permitted project. The homes we see most in Beaumont are stucco tract homes in Sundance, Tournament Hills, and Fairway Canyon - communities that went up quickly during the 2000s and early 2010s growth period. Many of these neighborhoods sit on graded lots with relatively newer slabs, but we still inspect every foundation before building on it because hillside grading and soil compaction on newer subdivisions can create settling problems that are not visible until you start looking carefully at the flatwork.
Most Beaumont residents know the city's main corridors - Beaumont Avenue, Pennsylvania Avenue, and the interchange where Interstate 10 and State Route 60 converge near Noble Creek Regional Park. Our crews travel these routes regularly, and we understand how the wind picks up as you move east toward the turbine fields and the pass narrows. That wind context directly informs how we detail roofline attachments and seal glass perimeters on every project east of the 10.
We serve homeowners in neighboring communities as well. Residents in Banning to the east face comparable wind exposure and similar pass-elevation climate conditions, and many Beaumont homeowners live close to the San Jacinto valley to the southwest, where we also work regularly.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form. We reply to every new inquiry from Beaumont within one business day and schedule an on-site visit at a time that works for your schedule.
We visit your Beaumont home, measure the space, inspect the existing slab and roofline for any issues, and review your HOA requirements if applicable. You receive a written estimate with a fixed project cost - no ranges that shift at contract.
We submit plans to the City of Beaumont Building Division and manage the permit process. Once approvals are in hand, construction typically takes three to six weeks depending on room size - you do not need to be present during the build, but we keep you updated at each stage.
The city conducts a final inspection, we walk through the completed room with you, and you receive the permit sign-off documents for your records. Those documents are important to keep for your homeowners insurance update and for any future sale.
We serve all of Beaumont - from Sundance and Tournament Hills to Fairway Canyon and the newer east-side neighborhoods. Free on-site estimate, no obligation.
(951) 467-1314Beaumont sits at the western end of the San Gorgonio Pass in Riverside County, at about 2,500 feet elevation between the San Bernardino Mountains to the north and the San Jacinto Mountains to the south. The city grew from roughly 11,000 residents in 2000 to over 60,000 by the early 2020s - one of the fastest growth rates in California during that period. That growth came almost entirely from large master-planned communities: Sundance, Tournament Hills, and Fairway Canyon filled in the western and southern edges of the city with thousands of stucco tract homes, most built between 2000 and 2015. These neighborhoods have parks, community amenities, and HOA oversight, and they draw families who moved out from the Los Angeles Basin and closer-in Inland Empire cities in search of more affordable ownership.
The housing stock is almost uniformly single-family detached homes with two-car garages, concrete tile roofs, and covered back patios - a profile that maps directly to the kind of sunroom and patio enclosure work we do most. The eastern sections of the city have newer developments on more varied terrain, while the older core near Beaumont Avenue and the freeway has a more established feel. Beaumont borders Banning to the east and sits about 20 miles from Moreno Valley to the west, two communities we also serve regularly.
Serving Sundance, Tournament Hills, Fairway Canyon, and every neighborhood in Beaumont - call today and we will schedule your on-site visit within one business day.