
Santa Clarita Sunrooms & Patios builds sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Canyon Country homeowners. We know this area, from the hillside tracts above Soledad Canyon Road to the neighborhoods near Six Flags Magic Mountain, and we pull permits through the City of Santa Clarita for every project we build here.

Canyon Country homes built during the 1980s and 1990s building boom often have large, underused backyards designed for a time before triple-digit summer heat pushed people indoors. A sunroom addition turns that wasted outdoor square footage into air-conditioned living space you will actually use all year.
Canyon Country sits in an inland valley that gets intense afternoon heat from June through September. A patio enclosure converts an existing covered patio into a shaded, screened, or glass-walled room that cuts the heat load and keeps out the dust and insects that accompany every Santa Ana wind season.
Temperatures in Canyon Country swing from well above 100 degrees Fahrenheit in July to near-freezing on some December nights in the valley. A fully insulated four-season sunroom handles that entire range and gives Canyon Country families a room they can actually use when it is 108 degrees outside.
Canyon Country evenings in spring and fall can be genuinely comfortable, but insects follow the warm air off the hillsides once temperatures drop. A screen room lets families enjoy the outdoor feel of those cooler hours without the bugs, and it provides a layer of ember screening during fire season as well.
For Canyon Country homeowners who want shade and protection from the intense afternoon sun without enclosing their patio entirely, a solid attached patio cover is a practical first step. It extends usable hours on the patio significantly and reduces the heat that radiates back into your home from a sun-baked concrete slab.
Some Canyon Country homes from the 1980s and early 1990s already have a basic enclosed porch or sunroom that was built without modern insulation or heat-blocking glass. Remodeling that existing structure with current materials can turn a stuffy, unusable room into real living space that holds up to the valley heat.
Canyon Country was built fast. Most of the housing stock went up during a roughly 25-year tract home boom that started in the early 1980s, and those homes are now 20 to 40 years old. That age range puts original roofing, original exterior caulking, and first-generation patio structures squarely in the window where upgrades and additions are common. More importantly, many Canyon Country neighborhoods were built on sloped lots carved out of the foothills surrounding the valley, and hillside terrain means drainage, grading, and foundation design all require more careful planning than a flat suburban lot would demand.
The climate in Canyon Country makes proper material selection critical. Summer temperatures regularly climb above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and the area sits within a High Fire Hazard Severity Zone, which creates building code requirements around roofing, attic venting, and structural materials that apply directly to sunroom construction. The California Office of the State Fire Marshal maintains the fire hazard zone designations that determine which materials are code-compliant here. A contractor who is not familiar with these requirements can build you a sunroom that fails inspection or creates a liability problem when you sell.
Our crew works throughout Canyon Country regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The neighborhood sits in the northeastern corner of Santa Clarita, with the Antelope Valley Freeway running through it and Soledad Canyon Road serving as the main east-west artery that most residents use daily. We have worked on homes all along that corridor and throughout the hillside streets that branch off toward the foothills.
Six Flags Magic Mountain is Canyon Country's most recognizable landmark, and the neighborhoods that surround it represent a large share of the homes we work on in this area. Many residents here commute on the SR-14 toward Los Angeles and spend long days away from home, which means they need a contractor who will show up when scheduled and complete the work without requiring the homeowner to be on-site every day. We have been pulling permits through the City of Santa Clarita's Building and Safety Division for years and are familiar with their typical plan check timelines.
We also serve the areas surrounding Canyon Country, including Agua Dulce to the east and Saugus to the west. If you have neighbors or family nearby who are thinking about a sunroom project, we likely cover their area as well.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and we will follow up within one business day. We ask a few questions upfront about your property, your timeline, and what you have in mind so the site visit is productive from the start.
We come to your Canyon Country property, assess the existing slab or foundation, check slope and drainage conditions, and walk through your goals. Our written estimate breaks out labor, materials, permit fees, and any site preparation work separately so you know exactly what you are paying for.
We file the permit application with the City of Santa Clarita and schedule construction to begin once approval is in hand. Construction on most Canyon Country projects runs two to five weeks depending on scope and site conditions.
We schedule the city inspection and walk through the finished room with you before we consider the project complete. You receive copies of the permit sign-off, which you will need when you sell the home.
We serve Canyon Country homeowners with no-pressure estimates. Call us or fill out the form and we will follow up within one business day.
(661) 592-2910Canyon Country is one of the four main communities that make up the City of Santa Clarita, which was incorporated in 1987. It occupies the northeastern part of the city, tucked into the hills at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains. The area grew rapidly during the 1980s and 1990s as suburban development spread into the Santa Clarita Valley, and most of its housing stock consists of single-family detached homes on individual lots. The community has a high rate of owner-occupied homes, and residents tend to invest in keeping their properties well-maintained over the long term.
Six Flags Magic Mountain is Canyon Country's most visible landmark, but the community itself is defined by its residential streets, its proximity to the SR-14 freeway, and a daily rhythm built around the commute corridor into Los Angeles. Soledad Canyon Road is the main east-west street through the community, and the neighborhoods that spread out from it into the hills represent a wide range of home sizes, ages, and site conditions. Neighboring communities include Agua Dulce to the east and Newhall to the west, both of which we also serve.
Enjoy the outdoors bug-free with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom addition.
Learn MoreUpgrade your deck into a comfortable, weather-protected sunroom.
Learn MoreSummer heat is not going anywhere. Call us now or fill out the form and we will get back to you within one business day.