
Superior Stanton Sunrooms & Patios designs and builds custom sunrooms, enclosed patios, and patio covers for homeowners throughout Cypress, CA. We have served the Orange County area since 2018 and respond to all new inquiries within one business day.

Cypress tract homes from the 1960s and 1970s come in similar floor plans throughout the city, but every backyard is a little different. We design custom sunrooms that work with your specific lot dimensions, existing roofline, and exterior finish - so the addition looks like it was part of the original house, not bolted on years later.
Most Cypress homes from the tract era have a concrete back patio slab that gets too hot in summer and too cold and damp during November through February. Enclosing that slab with insulated walls and a proper roof turns it into usable living space without the cost and disruption of a conventional room addition.
Cypress summers push into the high 80s and occasionally past 100 degrees during heat waves, and an unshaded concrete patio becomes unusable by midday. A solid alumawood or stucco patio cover cuts direct sun and drops the surface temperature significantly, making the space actually comfortable on summer afternoons.
Cypress lots are compact - typically 5,000 to 7,500 square feet - which means a sunroom addition that uses the existing concrete slab footprint is often the most efficient way to add square footage. We work within Cypress setback requirements to maximize the room size while staying within the permitted footprint.
Cypress homeowners who work from home or want a dedicated family room benefit most from a fully insulated four-season room with a mini-split unit. Cypress winters are mild but the rainy season from November through March can make an uninsulated patio room cold and damp for weeks at a stretch.
Cypress evenings from May through October are genuinely pleasant - warm but not hot, with enough of a coastal breeze to make outdoor time comfortable. A screened room captures that evening air while keeping out Santa Ana wind-blown debris and the insects that come with warm nights.
Cypress was built out between the late 1950s and early 1980s, and the housing stock reflects that era: stucco exteriors, slab-on-grade foundations, low-slope roofs, and attached garages that take up a good portion of the front elevation. Homes this age have had 50-plus years of sun exposure, wet winters, and Santa Ana wind events working on their exteriors. When a sunroom or enclosed patio is attached to a house this old, the connection between old and new is where problems most often appear - water intrusion at the roof junction, stucco cracking at the attachment wall, and settling at the new slab edge. A contractor who works on Cypress homes regularly has seen those failure points and knows how to design around them.
Cypress also sits on expansive clay soils that cause concrete to crack and shift over time. Most of the driveways and patios poured in the 1960s and 1970s in Cypress show this movement clearly - raised sections, cracks running diagonally, and gaps at the house foundation. A new sunroom slab or footing needs to account for this soil behavior from the start. The California Department of Conservation identifies this area as having soils with significant shrink-swell potential, which directly affects foundation specifications for any new addition.
Our crew works throughout Cypress regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The tract homes in Cypress are remarkably consistent in construction - stucco exteriors, concrete slab foundations, and low-pitch roofs that repeat across most of the city's residential streets. That consistency is useful: it means our estimators know what they are going to find before they arrive, and our installation crews are not encountering surprises when they open up an exterior wall to connect the new structure.
Cypress is a compact city bounded by the 605 Freeway to the east and Katella Avenue to the south. The neighborhoods near Cypress College in the center of the city and the streets near Los Alamitos Race Course on the southwestern edge are both areas where we work regularly. The housing on those streets is typical of the city as a whole: well-maintained single-family homes whose owners invest in keeping their properties in good condition.
We also serve the cities immediately adjacent to Cypress. Homeowners in Buena Park to the north and Stanton to the northeast call us for the same reason: they want a contractor who knows how homes in this part of northwestern Orange County were built and what it takes to add to them properly.
Call us or submit the estimate form on this page. We respond to every Cypress inquiry within one business day and typically schedule an on-site visit within the same week. No commitment required at this stage.
We come to your Cypress home, measure the space, review the existing slab and exterior wall conditions, and discuss design options. The visit is free and takes about 30 to 45 minutes. You receive a written scope and firm price before we ask you to decide anything.
We handle all permit paperwork and submit to the Cypress Building Division on your behalf. Permit approval takes two to four weeks. We confirm your construction start date once the permit is in hand and provide a realistic completion date upfront.
Construction on most Cypress sunroom and patio enclosure projects takes two to five weeks. We complete all required city inspections during the build. At the end, we walk through the finished space with you and provide your permit paperwork and final inspection sign-off to keep with your home records.
We work on custom sunrooms and patio enclosures throughout Cypress - from the neighborhoods near Cypress College to the streets along the 605 Freeway. Free on-site visit, written price, no obligation.
(657) 385-0221Cypress is a mid-size city of roughly 50,000 people in northwestern Orange County, incorporated in 1956 and built out rapidly through the 1960s and 1970s as developers converted former agricultural land into suburban tract neighborhoods. The city covers about 6.8 square miles and is fully developed - there is no undeveloped residential land remaining. The housing stock is almost entirely single-family detached homes built in a consistent range of 1960s and 1970s tract styles: three or four bedrooms, single-story or two-story, stucco exteriors, attached garages, and concrete slab foundations. Owner-occupancy rates are high, and homes here have appreciated significantly over the past decade, which means homeowners are motivated to invest in improvements that add value and livability.
Cypress sits between Buena Park to the north, Los Alamitos and Seal Beach to the south and west, and Stanton and Garden Grove to the east. Major landmarks include Cypress College, which has anchored the center of the city since 1966, and Los Alamitos Race Course just across the city's southwestern border. Katella Avenue runs along the southern edge of the city and serves as one of the main commercial corridors. The neighborhoods throughout Cypress are quiet and well-maintained - this is a city of long-term homeowners rather than transient renters, and that shows in the condition of the housing stock. Homeowners in neighboring La Palma and Buena Park share similar housing types and call us for the same reasons.
Expand your home with a beautiful, professionally built sunroom addition.
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Learn MoreWe are scheduling new projects in Cypress now. Reach out today and we will have a written estimate to you within a few days.