
LSS Lancaster Sunrooms & Patios builds sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Victorville homeowners throughout the High Desert. We are licensed and insured, and our team understands the specific demands of desert construction at elevation - from the 100-degree summers and freezing winter nights to the Mojave wind and UV conditions that standard contractors underestimate.

Most homes in Victorville were built during the 1990s and 2000s housing boom, and many owners are now ready to add the living space they always planned on. Full sunroom construction means building a new room from the foundation up - engineered for the High Desert's soil, temperature swings, and wind loads - rather than adapting an existing structure. Victorville's flat, desert lots are well suited to ground-up construction, and having the room properly permitted protects your investment at resale.
Victorville sits at about 2,700 feet in the Mojave Desert. That elevation means winter nights regularly drop below freezing while summer days top 100 degrees. A four season sunroom with insulated walls, thermally broken frames, and a mini-split climate system handles both extremes, giving you a room that is genuinely comfortable from January through August without straining your utility bills.
Desert wind carries fine grit and sand that makes open patio use unpleasant for weeks at a time in spring. Victorville homes with covered rear patios can be converted into enclosed rooms by adding glazed or screened wall panels, instantly creating a protected outdoor space that keeps wind, dust, and insects out. This is one of the most cost-effective upgrades for the tract-built homes that dominate the city.
During the milder spring and fall months, Victorville weather can be comfortable, but open patios pick up blowing sand, desert debris, and insects. A screen room provides a permeable barrier that keeps the patio usable and protected without blocking air movement, which is welcome on mild desert evenings. It is a practical, lower-cost option for homeowners who want to extend patio use without full enclosure.
Victorville's intense sun and high UV levels at elevation make shade a practical necessity for outdoor spaces. A solid patio cover - aluminum, wood, or insulated panel - reduces the surface temperature of your patio significantly and makes outdoor time bearable from April through October. It is also the natural first step if you plan to enclose the space at a later date.
Victorville homeowners who want a flexible bonus room that serves as an office, playroom, or guest space year-round benefit from a fully enclosed all season room. These rooms are insulated, climate-controlled, and finished to the same standard as interior living space, which means they hold their value better than unheated enclosures in the harsh desert climate.
Victorville sits at roughly 2,700 feet in the Mojave Desert, and the climate here is genuinely demanding in ways that surprise homeowners who moved from coastal Southern California. Summer daytime highs regularly exceed 100 degrees, and the elevation means UV exposure is stronger than it would be at sea level. At the same time, winter nights in Victorville drop below freezing regularly, and the city sees occasional snow. That range - from 100-degree summer heat to below-freezing winter cold - subjects every outdoor structure to a level of thermal stress that requires careful material and engineering choices. Standard glass specs and lightweight framing that might be acceptable in a milder climate will fail faster here.
The housing stock in Victorville compounds the challenge. Most homes were built between 1990 and 2010 during the city's rapid growth period, which means the bulk of the residential base is now 15 to 35 years old. Stucco exteriors are the norm, and while stucco performs well in dry climates, the desert freeze-thaw cycle causes cracking over time, especially on homes that have never had exterior maintenance. Concrete driveways and patios across the city show similar patterns - expansion and contraction from daily temperature swings works cracks open year after year. A sunroom foundation built here must account for the same soil and temperature forces that are slowly working on every concrete surface in the neighborhood.
Our crew works throughout Victorville regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Permits for structural additions in Victorville are submitted to the City of Victorville Building and Safety Division, and our team is familiar with the plan check requirements and inspection sequence in this municipality. Knowing the local permitting process helps us set accurate timelines for our customers - the difference between a contractor who has pulled permits in Victorville before and one who has not shows up directly in how smoothly a project runs.
Interstate 15 runs directly through Victorville, connecting the city to the Inland Empire to the south and Las Vegas to the northeast. Many residents commute down the 15 to jobs in San Bernardino or Riverside, which means they are often away from home during the day. We schedule work around our customers' availability and keep communication clear so homeowners who are not on-site all day stay informed. The historic Route 66 corridor runs through downtown Victorville, and the city's older neighborhoods near that corridor have homes with different construction than the newer tract subdivisions off Bear Valley Road.
We also serve the neighboring community of Hesperia just to the south, and homeowners in Apple Valley to the east. If you are not sure whether your address falls within our service range, call us and we will confirm.
Reach us by phone at (661) 952-4269 or through the estimate form on this page. We respond within one business day, and you will speak with someone who knows Victorville and the High Desert, not a general call center.
We visit your property at no charge to assess your lot, discuss options, and provide a written estimate. We address cost and timeline at this visit so you have all the information you need before making any decisions.
We submit the permit application to the City of Victorville on your behalf and handle all communication with the building department. Materials are ordered during permit review to avoid delays once approval arrives.
On-site construction typically runs one to four weeks. We schedule all required city inspections and walk through the finished room with you before final sign-off to confirm the work meets the agreed scope.
Free on-site estimates for Victorville homeowners. No obligation. Straight pricing and honest answers about what your project will involve.
(661) 952-4269Victorville is a city of about 134,000 people in the High Desert region of San Bernardino County, situated along the Mojave River at approximately 2,700 feet above sea level. The city grew rapidly in the 1990s and 2000s as buyers priced out of the Los Angeles and Inland Empire markets moved north along Interstate 15 to take advantage of lower home prices. That growth left the city with a housing stock that is mostly single-family detached homes built during that era - stucco exteriors, tile roofs, attached two-car garages, and modest lots. Most homes are owner-occupied, and residents tend to stay for years rather than turn over frequently. The historic Route 66 corridor runs through downtown Victorville along D Street and 7th Street, where the California Route 66 Museum is located, and the old neighborhood near that corridor has some of the city's oldest homes.
The former George Air Force Base, now the Southern California Logistics Airport, is one of the largest employers in the area and a recognizable anchor on the north side of the city. Bear Valley Road is the main east-west commercial corridor, and the newer residential subdivisions off Bear Valley and Hook Boulevard represent the city's most recent growth. Many homeowners in these newer neighborhoods moved from the LA Basin specifically to get more house for their money, and improving that house with a permitted sunroom or enclosed patio is a natural next step. We also cover neighboring Hesperia to the south, which shares similar high-desert conditions and housing stock.
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Learn MoreCall today to schedule your free on-site estimate. Spring and fall are our busiest seasons - contact us now to reserve your project slot.