Oxnard Sunrooms and Patios installs four season sunrooms, patio enclosures, and custom screen rooms for Camarillo homeowners. We have served the Ventura County area since 2019 and respond to every inquiry within one business day.

Camarillo sits in a mild coastal valley, but the temperature swings between a cool foggy morning and a warm afternoon are real enough to make an uninsulated room uncomfortable half the time. A four season sunroom with insulated glass and climate-appropriate framing gives you a room you can use comfortably from January through December without running a heater or air conditioner on full blast.
Most of Camarillo's ranch-style homes came with a simple concrete slab patio that gets wind-blown debris during Santa Ana events and sits too exposed in summer to use comfortably at midday. Enclosing that slab converts dead outdoor square footage into a protected room that adds to daily living and to the value of the home.
Camarillo evenings are pleasant enough to sit outside most of the year, but insects near the agricultural edges of the city make open-air sitting less enjoyable than it should be. A screened room gives you full ventilation and the feel of being outside while keeping the bugs out, at a lower cost than a fully glazed enclosure.
Homes in Camarillo Heights and Las Posas Estates sit on larger lots with non-standard rooflines, and a custom sunroom designed for the specific property will look like it belongs rather than like it was added on as an afterthought. We design around the existing architecture, setback requirements, and how you plan to use the space.
Camarillo has a large stock of homes built in the 1970s and 1980s, and some of those homes have older aluminum-frame sunrooms with single-pane panels that are drafty in winter and overheated in summer. Remodeling the existing structure with modern insulated glazing often costs less than tearing it down and starting over.
Camarillo's long dry season means the backyard patio gets intense sun from May through October. A solid patio cover shades the outdoor space for afternoon use, protects furniture from UV fading, and gives the backyard a cleaner, more finished look without the cost of a fully enclosed room.
Most homes in Camarillo were built between 1960 and 2000, and the majority are single-story ranch-style houses with stucco exteriors and concrete tile roofs. That construction era means older wall framing, roofing underlayments that may be near the end of their lifespan, and concrete flatwork that has had decades to crack and settle in the area's clay-heavy soils. Attaching a sunroom or patio enclosure to a home in this condition requires assessing what is already there before cutting or framing - not every older Camarillo roofline can support a new structure without reinforcement. Santa Ana wind events also matter here: gusts over 50 mph can stress a poorly anchored enclosure enough to cause damage, so we build and anchor to handle those conditions.
The Camarillo valley also has clay-heavy soils that expand and contract with the wet and dry seasons, and that movement puts stress on concrete slabs, foundations, and any structure attached to them. An enclosure built on a shifting slab without proper footings or isolation joints will start showing cracks and gaps within a few years. We account for soil conditions in every project, and we work within the permit process managed by the City of Camarillo Building Division to ensure the final structure meets code and is properly inspected.
Our crew works throughout Camarillo regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and patio enclosure work here. We pull permits through the City of Camarillo Building Division and know the plan-check requirements for room additions in this municipality. That experience with the local permit office reduces delays between the estimate and breaking ground.
We have worked on homes across Camarillo's distinct neighborhoods - from tract homes in Mission Oaks near Las Posas Road, to custom hillside properties in Las Posas Estates and Camarillo Heights above the valley floor. The valley-floor neighborhoods were largely built in planned phases in the 1970s through 1990s, so the homes within a given area often share the same construction era and materials. Homes near the Camarillo Premium Outlets off the 101 and in the Springville area tend to be newer builds from the 1990s and 2000s with more standardized framing. The hillside homes are a different story - larger lots, older custom builds, and access that sometimes requires more planning.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Thousand Oaks to the east, which shares many of the same suburban housing types and permit requirements as Camarillo. If you are on the boundary between cities or know someone in Thousand Oaks who needs work done, we cover that area as well.
Call or submit the contact form and we respond within one business day. We set up a free on-site visit at a time that works for your schedule - no commitment required at this stage.
We walk your property, assess the existing structure and foundation conditions, discuss your goals, and review HOA or zoning considerations. You receive a detailed written estimate before any work begins - no surprise costs added later.
We submit permit applications to the City of Camarillo and manage the process through approval. Construction starts after permits are in hand, which typically takes two to four weeks from submission.
We schedule the final City of Camarillo inspection, walk you through the completed structure, and make sure everything works and looks right before we close out the project.
We serve all of Camarillo, including Mission Oaks, Las Posas Estates, Camarillo Heights, and Springville. Free estimates, no pressure, response within one business day.
(805) 853-2176Camarillo is a mid-size city in Ventura County, located in the Oxnard Plain about 10 miles from the Pacific coast. The city grew rapidly after World War II and again through the 1980s and 1990s, and today most of its housing stock consists of single-family ranch-style homes built between 1960 and 2000. The city is known for its planned residential neighborhoods - areas like Mission Oaks and Springville were developed in large phases, which means the homes in a given neighborhood often share the same age, materials, and maintenance needs. Older streets near Old Town Camarillo along Ventura Boulevard contain some of the city's pre-1960 housing, while newer developments along the 101 corridor represent the growth of the 1990s and early 2000s.
The hillside areas of Camarillo - Las Posas Estates and Camarillo Heights above the valley floor - have larger custom-built homes on bigger lots, some with horse property. These neighborhoods were built primarily in the 1970s and 1980s and have a different character than the valley-floor tracts. Camarillo is also home to Camarillo Airport, a general aviation facility on the west side of the city that houses the California Air Museum, and is a recognizable landmark for anyone who has spent time in the area. We work throughout all of Camarillo and also serve nearby Oxnard to the west.
Professional sunroom construction from foundation to finishing touches.
Learn MoreKeep bugs out while enjoying fresh air in a screened outdoor room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreOur schedule fills quickly in spring and fall - contact us today to lock in your assessment date and get a written estimate with no obligation.