
Rohnert Park Sunrooms & Patios is a local sunroom contractor serving Rohnert Park, specializing in sunroom additions, four season rooms, and patio enclosures. We have served Sonoma County homeowners since 2017 with fully permitted, seismic-compliant builds and a response time of one business day.

Rohnert Park homes from the 1960s and 1970s often have usable side yards and rear yards that sit empty because there is no comfortable transition between inside and outside. A sunroom addition converts that dead space into a room you actually use - insulated for Sonoma County winters and vented for warm summer afternoons.
Rohnert Park temperatures swing from cool winter mornings in the 30s to summer afternoons near 90. A fully insulated four season sunroom is climate-controlled year round, so you are not walking into a cold box in January or an oven in July - it works the same as any other room in your house.
Many Rohnert Park homes have original covered patios that were added in the 1970s and 1980s - open on the sides, leaky, and not worth spending time in during wildfire smoke season or rainy months. A patio enclosure seals those gaps with proper glazing and framing so the space is protected and usable for more of the year.
Rohnert Park sits near wetland corridors that bring mosquitoes into backyards from late spring through fall. A properly screened room lets you have the outdoor feel and the breeze without the insects - a practical choice for homeowners who want fresh air without screens propped against open windows.
The established neighborhoods in Rohnert Park have a consistent architectural character - ranch rooflines, stucco exteriors, and measured proportions. A custom sunroom designed to match your home's specific geometry blends in rather than looking like an afterthought, which matters for curb appeal and for HOA approval in many of these neighborhoods.
Older sunrooms in Rohnert Park built before current energy codes often use single-pane glass and minimal insulation - they leak heat in winter and trap it in summer. Remodeling an existing room with proper glazing and sealing transforms a space that was borderline usable into one that is comfortable every month of the year.
Most homes in Rohnert Park were built between 1960 and 1985 as part of large planned subdivisions. That housing stock comes with slab-on-grade foundations, wood-frame walls, and original concrete flatwork - all of which affect how a sunroom addition is engineered and attached. Contractors who do not work regularly in this area may underestimate the prep work involved in connecting a new room to an older California ranch home, particularly once California seismic requirements and the local permit process are factored in.
Rohnert Park also has an active HOA landscape. Neighborhoods like Sonoma Mountain Village and many of the older subdivisions require architectural review before a homeowner can even apply for a city permit. Getting the design approved by the association first - and understanding what the City of Rohnert Park Building Division requires alongside that - is something a contractor only learns from doing this work here repeatedly. A misstep at this stage can add weeks of delay and force design changes after plans have already been drawn.
Our crew pulls permits regularly from the City of Rohnert Park Building Division on Commerce Boulevard, and we know the current review timelines and inspector expectations for sunroom projects in the city. That familiarity speeds up the front end of every project and avoids the surprises that slow down contractors who only work here occasionally.
We work across Rohnert Park's neighborhoods - from the older ranch homes near Sonoma State University and the Green Music Center to the newer two-story builds in Vast Oak on the southeast side of town. The clay soils common across the valley floor mean we always assess the concrete slab and existing drainage before quoting foundation work, especially on homes from the 1960s and 1970s where the original flatwork has been through decades of seasonal soil movement.
Rohnert Park sits just south of Santa Rosa and is easy to reach from Highway 101. We also serve Cotati directly to the south, and our crews move between both cities regularly. If you are comparing options with a neighbor in Santa Rosa, know that we cover that area as well.
Call or submit the contact form and we will follow up within one business day. We will ask a few basic questions - how you want to use the space, whether you have an HOA, and roughly what size you have in mind - so we come to your home prepared.
We visit your home, measure the space, check the existing slab and drainage, and discuss your options in person. This is where cost comes into focus - we give you a realistic range before you commit to anything, with no pressure to sign on the spot.
Once you approve the proposal, we prepare drawings and submit the permit application to the City of Rohnert Park Building Division. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we handle the architectural review documentation first. Plan review typically takes two to four weeks.
After permit approval, construction begins. The city inspector visits to sign off on the finished work - a required step that also confirms everything was done correctly. We finish with a walkthrough so you can see every detail before we consider the job complete.
We serve all of Rohnert Park, CA - from the older ranch neighborhoods near Sonoma State to the newer homes in Vast Oak. No pressure, no obligation.
(707) 457-6535Rohnert Park was developed as one of California's first planned cities, built almost entirely between the late 1950s and the mid-1980s. The city has about 43,000 residents and sits along Highway 101 roughly midway between Santa Rosa to the north and Petaluma to the south. Most of the housing stock consists of single-story ranch homes on standard lots, though the southeastern Vast Oak and Willowglen neighborhoods added newer two-story homes in the 2000s and 2010s. Rohnert Park is also home to Sonoma State University, whose campus anchors the eastern portion of the city and whose Green Music Center is one of the area's best-known landmarks.
Homeowners in Rohnert Park are spread across a range of neighborhoods - from the original grid-style tracts near the city center to the newer cul-de-sac developments near the western edge of the city and out toward Graton. Median home values hover around $550,000 to $600,000, which reflects the broader Sonoma County market and gives most owners a strong financial reason to maintain and invest in their properties. For sunroom work specifically, the combination of aging slab foundations, HOA-governed neighborhoods, and California seismic requirements makes local contractor experience genuinely matter. Cotati borders Rohnert Park directly to the south, and we serve both cities as a single service corridor.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreCall or submit a form today - we respond within one business day and serve all of Rohnert Park, CA.