
Superior Stanton Sunrooms & Patios builds sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for homeowners throughout Anaheim - from the postwar ranch homes in central Anaheim to the hillside properties in Anaheim Hills. We have served this area since 2018and know the local permit process, soil conditions, and glass requirements for this climate.

Anaheim's wide range of housing types - from 1960s ranch homes in central Anaheim to newer two-story properties in Anaheim Hills - calls for flexible sunroom construction that accounts for the specific foundation, roofline, and lot conditions of each property rather than a one-size approach.
Central and west Anaheim homes often have covered patios that get battered by Santa Ana winds and stay too hot or too exposed to use comfortably. A patio enclosure adds walls, screens, or glass panels to the existing structure, protecting the space from wind, bugs, and the afternoon sun without requiring a full new build.
For Anaheim homeowners who want a room that is genuinely comfortable in July heat and cool December evenings alike, a four-season sunroom with proper insulation and a mini-split heating and cooling unit delivers a true year-round living space without the greenhouse effect of inferior glass products.
Anaheim evenings near the resort district can be lively, and homeowners in all neighborhoods appreciate outdoor spaces that stay bug-free and comfortable after dark. A screen room is one of the most cost-effective ways to make a patio or deck usable throughout the evening hours.
Anaheim's varied housing stock - from flat-lot ranch homes to sloped Anaheim Hills properties - means a custom-designed sunroom that works around the specific constraints of your lot and roofline will always outperform a prefabricated kit that was never designed with your house in mind.
Anaheim's summers push temperatures into the 90s for months at a time, making uncovered backyard spaces almost unusable during peak afternoon hours. A solid patio cover creates reliable shade and dramatically reduces surface temperatures on the concrete or pavers beneath it.
Anaheim is one of the largest cities in Orange County, covering about 50 square miles with a population of roughly 350,000. Much of the city's residential development happened between the 1940s and 1980s, which means a large share of the homes are 50 to 80 years old. These properties have stucco exteriors, concrete slab foundations, and older building systems that present specific challenges for room additions. In Anaheim Hills, the hillside lots add drainage and grading considerations that flat-lot homes in central and west Anaheim do not face. A contractor who treats every Anaheim property the same will miss details that matter for long-term structural integrity.
Climate is another major factor. Anaheim summers push into the 90s regularly, and parts of the city also sit on clay-heavy soils that expand when wet and shrink when dry - a cycle that can shift concrete flatwork and stress foundations over time. The region also experiences Santa Ana wind events each fall, as documented by the National Weather Service Los Angeles Santa Ana wind page. A well-built sunroom needs to handle these conditions at the roof connection and foundation level - not just look good on the first day. Getting those details right from the start is what separates a room that holds up for 20 years from one that develops leaks and movement within the first few seasons.
Our crew works throughout Anaheim regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Anaheim Building Division for every job we do here. We know the city's submittal requirements, the typical review timeline for room addition permits, and the documentation the division expects for projects involving older slab foundations. That familiarity reduces back-and-forth during the approval process and saves weeks on projects where an unfamiliar contractor might hit avoidable delays.
The neighborhoods we work in most frequently span the length of the city - from the older ranch-style streets in central and west Anaheim near Ball Road and Lincoln Avenue, to the newer hillside properties in Anaheim Hills off the 241 corridor. Homes near Angel Stadium tend to be on flat lots with modest backyards, while Anaheim Hills properties often have sloped yards and retaining walls that require a different approach to staging, foundation preparation, and drainage. We come prepared for both.
We also regularly serve homeowners in neighboring Fullerton to the north and Buena Park to the west, both of which border Anaheim and share similar housing stock and climate demands. If neighbors in those areas are thinking about a sunroom or outdoor living project, we are already familiar with those streets.
Call or use our contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We will ask a few questions about your property and what you are hoping to build so we can schedule a site visit that makes efficient use of your time.
We walk your property, check the foundation and roofline conditions, and assess any slope or drainage factors specific to your lot. You will receive a written estimate that covers permitting, foundation work, glazing, and finishing - no items added later.
After you sign, we submit plans to the City of Anaheim Building Division and order materials. Permit review typically takes two to four weeks. We handle all the paperwork and update you at every milestone so you are never left wondering what is happening.
Construction typically runs two to four weeks. City inspectors visit at required stages. When the work is complete, we do a full walkthrough with you, hand over your permit documentation, and make sure everything meets your expectations before we close out the job.
We serve homeowners throughout Anaheim, CA - from central Anaheim to Anaheim Hills. Free estimate, no obligation, and a reply within one business day.
(657) 385-0221Anaheim is the largest city in Orange County by population, with roughly 350,000 residents spread across about 50 square miles. It is best known nationally as the home of Disneyland and Angel Stadium, but most of the city is made up of residential neighborhoods that have little to do with the resort district. Central and west Anaheim are dominated by postwar tract housing - single-story ranch homes on modest lots, built during the suburban expansion of the 1950s through 1970s. These neighborhoods sit close to the 5 and 91 freeways and have a long-established community character with many multi-decade homeowners.
Anaheim Hills, in the eastern portion of the city, is a distinctly different community. Homes there tend to be larger, often two-story, and sit on hillside lots with views of the surrounding hills and canyons. Development in Anaheim Hills happened mostly from the 1970s through the 1990s, so the housing stock is newer than in central Anaheim but still old enough to require attention to foundations, drainage, and exterior systems. The city also includes the Platinum Triangle near Angel Stadium and the Anaheim Canyon industrial area. For sunroom and outdoor living work, we focus on the residential neighborhoods throughout the city. We also serve homeowners in nearby Orange to the south and La Palma to the northwest, both of which border Anaheim neighborhoods.
Expand your home with a beautiful, professionally built sunroom addition.
Learn MoreEnjoy your sunroom comfortably in every season with full climate control.
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Learn MoreKeep bugs out and fresh air in with a professionally installed screen room.
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Learn MoreWe book quickly in Orange County. Contact us now to schedule a site visit before the season fills up.