
Quality Cypress Sunrooms & Patios serves Anaheim homeowners with sunroom additions, patio enclosures, four season sunrooms, and screen rooms. We have been serving Orange County since 2015, and we work across all of Anaheim - from the postwar ranch homes in west and central Anaheim to the hillside properties in Anaheim Hills, where sloped lots and retaining walls change how the work gets done.

Anaheim homes in the 6,000 to 7,500 square foot lot range often have enough rear yard space for a true room addition off the back of the house. Our sunroom additions are permitted and built to California residential code - whether you are adding off a flat west Anaheim slab or building on a terraced Anaheim Hills lot that needs foundation work first.
Central and west Anaheim homes from the 1950s and 1960s often have an original concrete patio slab in the back that has never been enclosed. Converting that existing slab into a weathertight room is the most cost-effective way to add usable indoor-outdoor space without major foundation work or disruption to the existing structure.
Anaheim summers regularly push into the 90s, and Santa Ana wind events in fall and winter bring heat and dry air from the other direction. A four season sunroom with insulated glazing keeps the space comfortable through both extremes - not just the three mild months where any enclosure feels good.
For Anaheim backyards that get afternoon shade and reasonable temperatures in spring and fall, a screen room is a practical first step - lower cost than a full enclosure, faster to permit, and enough to keep insects and debris out while allowing natural ventilation. Many homeowners start here and add glazing later.
Anaheim Hills properties with irregular rooflines, hillside grades, or unusual rear yard configurations do not fit a standard prefab enclosure kit. Custom sunroom design and construction handles the site-specific challenges - matching the roofline, stepping the foundation with the slope, and specifying materials for a structure that holds up in Anaheim's high-UV, high-wind environment.
An uncovered patio in Anaheim is unusable for at least three months of summer because of direct afternoon sun. A solid patio cover provides shade, cuts radiant heat from the west-facing sides of the house, and doubles as a preparatory structure if you plan to enclose the patio into a full sunroom in the future.
Anaheim covers about 50 square miles and spans two very different types of residential terrain. Central and west Anaheim are flat, densely built, and lined with postwar tract homes from the 1950s and 1970s - single-story stucco ranch houses on compact lots, most of them now 50 to 70 years old. Anaheim Hills in the east is a different story: larger homes on hillside lots with slopes, retaining walls, and drainage considerations that do not exist on flat ground. A contractor who treats both areas the same is going to miss critical site conditions at the estimate.
The climate adds its own demands. Anaheim summers are long and hot, regularly reaching the low to mid 90s with high UV that breaks down roofing materials, stucco coatings, and exterior caulking faster than in milder climates. Santa Ana winds are a real structural concern - gusts above 50 mph are common during fall and winter events, and any enclosure that is not fastened to current California wind-load standards can fail. Orange County's clay soils also shift with the wet-dry cycle each year, which affects whether an existing slab is sound enough to build on or needs attention first.
Our crew works throughout Anaheim regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Permits for Anaheim projects go through the City of Anaheim Building Division, which handles a high volume of permit applications for a city this size. We prepare complete submittals the first time to avoid resubmittal delays that add weeks to the front end of a project.
Anaheim is easy to navigate for a contractor: the 5 Freeway cuts through the center, the 91 runs along the north, and the 57 connects the east side. Landmarks like Angel Stadium and Disneyland anchor the western part of the city, while Anaheim Hills sits east of the 55. We work on homes in all of these areas - flat-lot ranch homes near the Resort District, mid-century tracts in central Anaheim, and hillside properties east of Weir Canyon Road.
We regularly serve homeowners in nearby Buena Park to the northwest, where the housing stock is similar in age and style. Fullerton to the north shares the same era of suburban tract development, and we cover both cities as part of our regular service territory across northern Orange County.
Contact us by phone or through the online form. We respond within one business day to set up a free on-site estimate at your Anaheim property - no charge, no pressure.
We come to your home, assess the slab or lot grade, roofline, and any existing structure, confirm permit requirements, and provide a written estimate with a fixed price. For Anaheim Hills properties, we account for slope and foundation requirements at this step.
Once you approve the estimate, we submit the permit application to the Anaheim Building Division. Construction starts after permit approval - most projects take two to six weeks of active work depending on scope.
We schedule the city final inspection, walk through the completed project with you, and make sure everything is operating correctly before closing out. You receive the permit documentation for your records and insurance provider.
We serve homeowners across all of Anaheim - west, central, and Anaheim Hills. One visit, one fixed price, no surprises.
(657) 337-7008Anaheim is the largest city in Orange County by population, with roughly 350,000 residents spread across about 50 square miles. The city is best known nationally as the home of Disneyland, which opened in 1955 and anchors the western part of the city. But most of Anaheim is residential, and it has been since the postwar housing boom of the late 1940s through the 1970s filled in the flatlands with single-story tract homes. That housing stock - stucco exteriors, slab foundations, modest lots, and attached garages - represents the bulk of the city's single-family homes today. In the east, Anaheim Hills is a distinct community of larger homes on winding hillside streets that developed primarily in the 1970s through 1990s.
About half of Anaheim households own their homes, and median home values have climbed to roughly $700,000 - meaning homeowners have real equity to protect and good reason to invest in improvements that add permitted square footage. The city borders Buena Park and Fullerton to the north, Orange and Villa Park to the south, and Placentia to the east. Homeowners in neighboring Fullerton to the north share the same era of housing stock and the same seasonal climate pressures, and we serve both cities as part of our regular territory.
A three-season sunroom gives you spring, summer, and fall outdoor living.
Learn MoreKeep bugs out and fresh air in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreQuality patio covers that protect your outdoor space from the elements.
Learn MoreCall us or submit a request online - we reply within one business day and provide free on-site estimates throughout Anaheim, CA.