
Rohnert Park Sunrooms & Patios installs screen rooms, sunroom additions, and patio enclosures for Cloverdale homeowners. We have served Sonoma County since 2017, handling permits through the City of Cloverdale and designing for the valley heat-rain cycle - with a one-business-day response to every inquiry.

Cloverdale evenings are warm from May through October, but insects move in once the sun goes down. A screen room lets you use your patio or back yard during the best part of the day and evening without fighting off bugs - and at a lower cost than a fully enclosed sunroom if you want outdoor air rather than climate control.
Cloverdale sits in an inland valley that gets hot in summer and wet in winter - a range that leaves most open patios useless for part of the year. A properly insulated sunroom addition gives you a comfortable room year-round and adds living space without the cost and complexity of a full interior addition to your home.
Many Cloverdale homes - especially the older Craftsman and Victorian houses near the historic downtown - have covered back porches that let in wind and rain from November through March. Enclosing those porches with proper glazing and framing turns unused seasonal space into a room the household can use every day of the year.
Cloverdale summers push temperatures into the 90s and occasionally past 100°F, while winter mornings can drop near freezing. An all season room with full insulation and both heating and cooling handles that entire temperature swing and functions as a true additional room rather than a seasonal-only space.
For Cloverdale homeowners who want a defined indoor-outdoor room for spring, summer, and fall without the cost of a fully climate-controlled build, a three season sunroom is a practical choice. The long dry season here - often six months without rain - means you get substantial use from a three season design before you need to factor in heating.
Vinyl framing holds up well under the freeze-thaw cycles Cloverdale sees in winter and does not absorb moisture the way wood does after heavy rainfall. For homes on larger rural parcels near the vineyards, where maintenance access is harder, a vinyl sunroom means less ongoing upkeep once the build is complete.
Cloverdale is the last city in Sonoma County before Highway 101 climbs into Mendocino County, and its housing stock reflects more than a century of settlement in that inland valley. A large share of homes were built before 1980, and many of the oldest neighborhoods near the historic downtown feature Craftsman bungalows and Victorian-era houses with wood siding, original covered porches, and foundations that have been through decades of wet winters and dry summers. Working on these homes requires checking existing structural members before attaching any new room - original wood framing and older foundation styles do not always accept a new load the same way newer construction does.
The climate in Cloverdale is harsher on exterior structures than coastal Sonoma County. Summer temperatures regularly hit the 90s, with annual rainfall of roughly 40 inches arriving between November and March. That sharp seasonal swing expands and contracts clay soils under and around foundations, stresses slab edges, and dries out exterior seals faster than most homeowners expect. The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection designates much of the land around Cloverdale as a high fire hazard severity zone, which means material choices for any outdoor structure - including ember-resistant vents and tempered glass - deserve serious consideration.
Our crew works throughout Cloverdale regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Cloverdale Building Division and know what plan review requires for addition projects in this jurisdiction - including the drainage documentation and setback checks that come up often on the larger parcels on the outskirts of town.
Cloverdale sits along Cloverdale Boulevard and is flanked by the Russian River corridor to the east and hillside vineyards on both sides of the valley. Properties near the river deal with more groundwater pressure in wet years, and we factor drainage into every job in that part of town. Homes on the sloped parcels near the vineyards often have uneven grades that require additional foundation planning before a new room can go up cleanly. The Cloverdale Citrus Fair grounds are one of the community anchors that longtime residents reference, and the mix of in-town lots and larger agricultural parcels on the edge of the city means we regularly work on two very different types of properties depending on which part of Cloverdale the job is in.
We also serve Rohnert Park to the south, where our base of operations is located, and our crews travel the full length of Highway 101 through Sonoma County. Cloverdale is the northern end of that route, and we know the drive and the properties well enough that response time and scheduling are not an obstacle.
Call or submit the contact form and we will reach you within one business day. We will ask about your property type, how you plan to use the space, and what prompted the project - so the site visit is focused rather than exploratory.
We come to your Cloverdale property, assess the existing structure and drainage, and talk through options that fit your budget. You get a realistic cost range at this visit - not a teaser price that changes later.
We handle the permit application with the City of Cloverdale Building Division and schedule the build once approval is in hand. You do not need to manage the permit process - we track it and notify you when the review is complete.
We complete a final walkthrough with you when the work is done and provide copies of all permit documentation. That paperwork is important for insurance coverage and for resale disclosures on Cloverdale properties.
We serve Cloverdale and the surrounding areas of northern Sonoma County. No pressure - just an honest conversation about what works for your property and your budget.
(707) 457-6535Cloverdale is a small city of roughly 9,000 people at the northern tip of Sonoma County, where Highway 101 runs up the Alexander Valley before heading into Mendocino County. The city has been settled since the 1850s, and its residential streets still include Victorian and Craftsman homes built in the late 1800s and early 1900s alongside modest mid-century ranch houses and some newer infill. The Russian River runs along the eastern edge of town, and vineyard land surrounds the city on the hillsides and valley floor - giving Cloverdale a Wine Country character without the heavy tourist traffic of cities further south in Sonoma County.
The Cloverdale Citrus Fair, held each February, is one of the oldest county fairs in California and a genuine community institution that most longtime residents have attended. Property types in town range from small in-town lots near the historic downtown to larger parcels on the outskirts where agricultural outbuildings, detached garages, and fencing are common. Homeowners in the rural-edge neighborhoods - near where Healdsburg road connections meet the valley - often have more exterior space to work with than a typical suburban lot, which creates more options for a screen room or sunroom addition that relates to the wider property rather than just the back of the house.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreCall us today or submit the contact form - we respond within one business day and will give you a straight answer about what your Cloverdale property needs and what it will cost.