
Custom Hesperia Sunrooms & Patios builds patio enclosures, sunrooms, and screen rooms for Adelanto, CA homeowners. Adelanto sits at about 2,800 feet in the Mojave Desert, where summer heat exceeds 100 degrees and winter nights drop below freezing - a combination that demands High Desert experience, which we have been building with since 2015.
Custom Hesperia Sunrooms & Patios builds patio enclosures, sunrooms, and screen rooms for Adelanto, CA homeowners. Adelanto sits at about 2,800 feet in the Mojave Desert, where summer heat exceeds 100 degrees and winter nights drop below freezing - a combination that demands High Desert experience, which we have been building with since 2015.

Adelanto homes sit on flat desert lots, and most have a concrete slab patio that bakes in the summer and collects blowing sand year-round. That slab is usually the foundation for an enclosure - the major prep work is already done. Our patio enclosures are built with High Desert glazing and sealing standards, turning that underused concrete area into a room you can actually live in.
Adelanto sits at nearly 2,800 feet in the Mojave, and the climate swings from hot summers to genuinely cold winters with occasional frost. A four season sunroom built for this range needs insulated walls, low-emissivity glazing, and a dedicated ductless climate system - not a screen porch with windows. For homeowners who want a room that works on both a 105-degree August afternoon and a 28-degree January night, this is the right build.
Adelanto evenings cool down quickly once the sun drops, and a screen room lets residents use their backyard during the comfortable hours without desert insects and blowing debris. It is the most accessible starting point for homeowners who want to extend their outdoor living space and is often the first step before deciding to upgrade to a fully enclosed room.
Adelanto homeowners who want flexibility - a space that feels like the outdoors in spring and fall but stays livable in summer heat and winter cold - find that an all season room delivers that balance at a cost below a full four season build. Getting the thermal envelope right from the start is what makes the room work across the full High Desert range.
Most of Adelanto was built in the late 1980s and 1990s, and many of those tract homes came with basic patio covers that were never designed to perform well in High Desert conditions. Remodeling an existing cover or early enclosure - replacing panels, resealing the roof-to-wall connection, adding insulation and climate control - is often more cost-effective than starting from scratch and produces a dramatically better result.
Adelanto properties are typically single-family homes on modest flat lots with a concrete slab in back - the classic High Desert layout. An enclosed patio room turns that slab into a permanent, permitted living space without the cost of a full room addition that breaks into your home's footprint. For landlords and owner-occupants alike, it is a practical way to add usable square footage.
Adelanto sits at about 2,800 feet in the Mojave Desert, putting it in a climate that most patio and sunroom contractors from lower-elevation parts of California are not prepared for. Summers regularly exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and the UV intensity at this elevation degrades roofing panels, window seals, and exterior coatings faster than they would fail at sea level. A patio enclosure built with materials rated for mild coastal conditions will warp, fade, or become unbearably hot within a few years here. The desert wind adds another factor - the Victor Valley is known for strong spring wind events that carry abrasive grit, and any structure with weak seals around windows and doors will fill with fine dust and be uncomfortable to use. Choosing glazing, framing connections, and roof assemblies specifically rated for these conditions is not optional in Adelanto; it is what determines whether the room you build is still working well in ten years.
Adelanto was built quickly during a rapid growth period in the late 1980s and 1990s, and most of the housing stock is now 30 to 40 years old. Tract homes from that era used standard materials that have been through decades of desert sun, frost, and wind - and many are showing the results in cracked stucco, aging roofs, and concrete flatwork that has shifted over time. Adding a patio enclosure or sunroom to one of these homes requires a contractor who knows how to assess the existing structure and tie a new room into it without creating new leak points or foundation problems. Flat lot drainage is also a consideration in Adelanto: the sandy desert soil does not absorb heavy rain quickly, and a sunroom foundation that does not account for water pooling can develop moisture issues after the wet season.
Our crew works throughout Adelanto regularly, and we pull permits from the City of Adelanto building department. We know the pace of their plan review process and we submit complete packages the first time to avoid delays. Adelanto is a compact city - the main residential areas spread across the flat desert floor between Highway 395 on the east side and the neighborhoods closer to Victorville Boulevard on the west, and we have worked on homes throughout that area. The land around El Mirage Road on the western edge of the city tends to have the sandiest, most mobile soil, which we factor into how we spec foundations in that part of town.
Most homes in Adelanto were built on flat, rectangular lots as part of the city's rapid growth in the late 1980s and 1990s. That uniformity of lot layout actually makes planning straightforward for enclosure projects - the patio slab is usually in a predictable location relative to the house, and the existing construction profile of these tract homes is familiar to us. Where it gets more complex is drainage: flat lots in the High Desert can pool water after a heavy rain, and we check that factor during every site visit because it affects how a foundation is sealed and whether grading work is needed before building starts.
Adelanto borders Victorville to the east, and we cover that entire corridor. We also serve neighboring Phelan, CA to the west for homeowners in that part of the High Desert. Our base in Hesperia, CA puts us within easy reach of the whole Victor Valley area.
Reach us by phone or through the estimate form on our site. We respond within one business day, ask a few questions about your project and your existing patio or outdoor space, and schedule a site visit at a time that works for you. No commitment is needed at this stage.
We visit your Adelanto property to assess the existing patio slab, lot drainage, soil conditions, and the wall the enclosure will attach to. Cost is addressed in a written estimate after this visit - not a vague phone ballpark. We check drainage and soil on every Adelanto project because flat lots here can have water pooling issues that affect how the foundation needs to be built.
We prepare and submit all drawings to the City of Adelanto. Plan review typically takes two to four weeks. We track the submission and follow up so you do not have to make calls to the city. Permit costs are included in your written estimate with no surprise fees added after the fact.
Once permits are in hand, construction moves through foundation preparation, framing, windows and panels, roofing, and interior finish. City inspections are coordinated by us at the required stages. The project closes with a walkthrough, operating instructions for any climate control equipment, and copies of all permit records for your files.
We serve all of Adelanto, CA. Written estimates, no pressure, High Desert experience since 2015.
(760) 392-8157Adelanto is a city in San Bernardino County with a population of around 38,000, situated on the flat desert floor of the Victor Valley at about 2,800 feet elevation. The city incorporated in 1988 and grew rapidly through the late 1980s and 1990s as new subdivisions went up across the High Desert. That growth period produced most of Adelanto's housing stock - single-family tract homes on modest rectangular lots, built quickly and now 30 to 40 years old. At that age, roofing, stucco, HVAC systems, and exterior finishes from the original construction are reaching the end of their typical service life, which means a lot of Adelanto homeowners are in the market for repairs and upgrades. The city sits just west of Victorville and is connected to the broader High Desert region by Highway 395, which runs along the eastern edge of town near the warehouse and distribution corridor that has become part of Adelanto's economic identity.
The High Desert climate that Adelanto shares with its Victor Valley neighbors - extreme summer heat, genuine winter cold with frost, and persistent wind - creates conditions that are hard on homes and make quality contractor work more important than in milder parts of California. The flat terrain and sandy soil mean drainage is something every property owner here has to think about, particularly in the neighborhoods near El Mirage Road on the western side of the city. We serve Adelanto from our base in nearby Adelanto-adjacent Hesperia, CA, and we also cover Victorville, CA to the east for homeowners throughout this part of the Victor Valley.
Free estimates for all Adelanto, CA homeowners. We respond within one business day.