
San Jacinto Sunrooms & Patios builds sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Beaumont homeowners. We engineer every room for the wind loads of the San Gorgonio Pass and have been serving Riverside County families since 2016 - permits pulled, HOA drawings provided.

Beaumont homes face specific challenges - strong pass winds, intense UV at elevation, and HOA rules in planned communities. Every service we offer is matched to those conditions.
Most of Beaumont was built out between 2000 and 2020, and those homes were designed with large rear yards ready for an addition. Our sunroom construction process starts with a structural review to confirm the existing slab and footing can carry the load before a single framing member goes up.
Beaumont tract homes typically have covered back patios built into the original design - a common layout in communities like Sundance and Fairway Canyon. Enclosing that existing patio with insulated glass and a proper roof tie-in turns unused covered space into a room you can actually live in year-round.
The wind through the San Gorgonio Pass carries dust, pollen, and debris that makes an unprotected patio unpleasant for much of the year. A screen room keeps the airflow you want while blocking what you do not - and it costs less than a full glass enclosure, which makes it a practical fit for Beaumont's budget-conscious neighborhoods.
Beaumont summers push into the mid-90s to low 100s, and winter nights drop below freezing. A four season sunroom built with insulated walls, roof, and low-E glass handles that full range of temperatures - so the room is usable in January and in August, not just on mild spring days.
Beaumont homeowners looking for a lower-maintenance exterior finish often choose vinyl-framed sunrooms for their resistance to fading and corrosion. Vinyl holds up better than painted wood in intense UV conditions - important at Beaumont's 2,500-foot elevation, where sun exposure degrades materials faster than at the coast.
Some Beaumont homes - particularly those on graded hillside lots in the northern and eastern parts of the city - have unusual footprints or slope conditions that prefab kits cannot accommodate. A custom-framed room is designed to fit the specific grade, roofline, and setback requirements of the individual property.
Beaumont sits at about 2,500 feet in the San Gorgonio Pass, one of the windiest corridors in Southern California. The rows of wind turbines visible on the hills east of town are not just a landmark - they are a reminder that sustained gusts above 50 mph are a regular occurrence here. A sunroom framed with components rated for lower wind zones will flex, leak, and fail prematurely in that environment. Every build we do in Beaumont uses framing and glazing specified for the actual wind loads this location experiences, not the coastal or valley minimums that many prefab kits are rated for.
The housing stock in Beaumont also creates a specific permitting and HOA dynamic. Because most of the city was developed in large planned communities - Sundance, Tournament Hills, Fairway Canyon - a significant portion of homeowners must clear an architectural review committee before they can even submit for a city permit. That is a two-step process that surprises many homeowners who have not been through it before. We prepare the project drawings and product specifications in the format these HOAs require, which reduces the back-and-forth and keeps the project timeline predictable. Once HOA approval is in hand, we submit to the City of Beaumont Building Division and handle the permit process from there.
Our crew works throughout Beaumont regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom construction here. The city grew fast - most of its neighborhoods went up in a compressed period between 2000 and 2020 - so the homes share a lot of the same construction details: attached two-car garages, covered rear patios, stucco exteriors, and concrete tile roofs. That consistency means we rarely encounter surprises when we open up a wall or tie into an existing roof structure.
Interstate 10 runs right through the middle of Beaumont, and the city straddles the line between the commuter suburbs to the west and the desert communities to the east. Noble Creek Regional Park sits on the south side of town and is a reference point most residents know well. The hillside neighborhoods in the northern parts of the city sit on graded terrain with retaining walls built into the original subdivision design - and those graded lots require extra attention during the footing phase of any addition.
We also serve homeowners just to the west in Banning, where the same pass-wind conditions apply and where we work on older homes with a different set of structural considerations than Beaumont's newer stock.
We respond within one business day - usually the same day. You describe what you have in mind, and we set a time to come out to the property for a look.
We inspect the existing slab or foundation, assess the lot grade and wind exposure, and review any HOA requirements before quoting. You get an itemized estimate - no vague ballpark figures.
Where HOA approval is required, we prepare the drawings and product specs first. Once HOA clearance is received, we submit the permit application to the City of Beaumont Building Division on your behalf.
We carry out the construction, coordinate the city inspection, and walk you through the finished room before we leave. All permit records are yours to keep for resale documentation.
We serve Beaumont and the surrounding San Gorgonio Pass area. Free on-site estimates, HOA drawings provided, and all city permits handled by our team.
(951) 910-7048Beaumont is one of the fastest-growing cities in California, expanding from roughly 11,000 residents in 2000 to more than 60,000 by the early 2020s. That growth came almost entirely from large master-planned communities built on the western and southern edges of the city - Sundance, Tournament Hills, and Fairway Canyon are the neighborhoods most Beaumont homeowners identify with. The city sits at about 2,500 feet on the western edge of the San Gorgonio Pass, with the San Bernardino Mountains visible to the north and the San Jacinto Mountains to the south. Most homes are single-family detached with stucco exteriors and concrete tile roofs, built to standard Riverside County construction practices but sitting in a notably windy and UV-intense environment. You can learn more about the city at the Beaumont, California Wikipedia article.
Because most of Beaumont was built in a compressed window, homes in these neighborhoods are all reaching similar maintenance milestones at the same time - first roof cycles, HVAC replacements, and now addition projects for families who have settled in and want to expand their living space. The city draws a lot of families who moved out from the Los Angeles Basin and Inland Empire looking for affordable homeownership, and those homeowners tend to invest in their properties over the long term. Nearby Banning sits just a few miles east along I-10 and has an older housing stock with its own set of needs - if you are comparing projects between the two cities, we handle both.
Glass solariums that maximize sunlight and indoor-outdoor connection.
Learn MoreWe serve Beaumont homeowners throughout the San Gorgonio Pass. Call now or request a free estimate - we respond within one business day.