Oxnard Sunrooms and Patios builds screen rooms, custom sunrooms, and patio enclosures for Malibu homeowners from Pacific Coast Highway to the inland canyons. We have served the Malibu area since 2019 and understand the salt-air exposure, fire-resistant building requirements, and site access conditions that shape every project in this city. We respond to every inquiry within one business day.

Malibu homes with ocean-facing decks and patios deal with coastal insects, airborne debris during Santa Ana wind events, and intense afternoon sun that makes uncovered outdoor spaces uncomfortable for months at a time. A professionally installed screen room using marine-grade aluminum frames and coastal-rated screen mesh keeps the ocean breeze while blocking what you do not want inside. We select materials that resist the salt-air corrosion that degrades standard screen hardware within a few years at this distance from the water.
Malibu properties range from flat beachfront lots to steep hillside sites with dramatic grade changes, and no prefab sunroom system handles that variety well. A custom sunroom designed for the actual conditions of your property - whether that means a cantilevered foundation on a canyon slope or a layout that maximizes ocean views from a PCH bluff - requires design and engineering that is specific to the site. We handle both in one process, which eliminates the handoff problems between separate designers and builders.
Many Malibu homes have covered deck areas or concrete patios that go unused during summer heat or wind season. Enclosing an existing covered patio with tempered glass panels and a properly sealed roof connection creates protected space that works when outdoor conditions do not. For homes that already have a slab and a solid roof structure, this is often the most cost-effective way to add livable square footage that does not require a full addition permit process.
A beach or canyon home in Malibu that is only comfortable for part of the year is a missed opportunity. An all season room with insulated glass, a properly sealed frame, and connected HVAC turns an underused outdoor space into a room that works through every season - from cool June gloom and fog-heavy mornings to hot, dry Santa Ana wind events in October and November. It also provides a buffer layer between the interior of the home and the corrosive salt-air environment outside.
Malibu has some of the most consistently clear and sunny days in Southern California, and a glass-roof solarium captures that light without the heat load and glare that comes from poorly glazed structures. Homes on hillside or canyon lots in particular have roof angles and orientations that a solarium can take full advantage of. We design to maximize natural light while managing solar heat gain so the room stays comfortable without running air conditioning continuously.
In a market where home values are as high as they are in Malibu, a sunroom addition done correctly is one of the few improvements that adds both livable square footage and long-term value to the property. Homes rebuilt or renovated after the 2018 Woolsey Fire are common throughout the city, and many owners are still looking at how to complete the living spaces they had before. We build to current California residential code and understand the fire-resistant material requirements that apply to new additions in Malibu's Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone.
Malibu stretches about 27 miles along the Pacific, and the homes here deal with conditions that simply do not exist a few miles inland. Salt air and coastal fog accelerate corrosion on metal frames, fasteners, and hardware at rates that can make standard building products fail within a few years. Homes on the beach or within a mile of the water need frames, anchors, and screening materials rated for coastal salt exposure, not the standard products that work fine in Thousand Oaks or Camarillo. Using the wrong materials on a beachfront property is not just an aesthetic problem - it is a structural one that shows up in a few years when fasteners corrode and frames begin to fail.
The city is also designated a Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, and that designation affects what materials and construction methods are required for any new addition. Homes on canyon lots bordered by dry brush have specific ember-resistant vent and non-combustible cladding requirements that apply to new sunrooms and additions. The 2018 Woolsey Fire destroyed more than 400 Malibu homes and made clear that fire exposure here is not a theoretical risk. We build to current code and factor these requirements into every estimate from the beginning.
Our crew works throughout Malibu regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and patio work here. We pull permits through the City of Malibu Building and Safety Division, and we are familiar with the plan-check requirements for room additions and structural patio work in this city, including the fire-resistant construction standards that apply in the Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone.
Malibu runs the length of Pacific Coast Highway from the Los Angeles city limits near Topanga Canyon in the east to the Ventura County line near Leo Carrillo State Beach in the west. The communities most people know - the Malibu Colony, Carbon Beach, Malibu Pier, and Zuma Beach - sit along PCH, while inland neighborhoods like Malibu Park, Big Rock, and the areas along Malibu Canyon Road and Las Virgenes sit in the hills and canyons of the Santa Monica Mountains. These hillside and canyon properties often have winding driveways, steep grades, and no turnaround space for large trucks. We work on both coastal and canyon properties and know how to coordinate equipment access before work begins.
We also serve homeowners in Oxnard to the north, and we regularly work in Simi Valley to the northeast, where hillside properties and fire-hazard zone conditions share some of the same characteristics we see on canyon properties in Malibu.
Contact us by phone or through the estimate form on this site. We respond to every Malibu inquiry within one business day and schedule a site visit at a time that works for you, including weekend appointments for homeowners with demanding schedules.
We come to the property, assess the site conditions, confirm applicable code requirements including fire-resistant construction rules, and review options that fit your goals and budget. You receive a detailed written estimate at no cost with no obligation to proceed.
We handle the building permit application with the City of Malibu Building and Safety Division and keep you informed through the plan-check review. Construction is scheduled once the permit is approved, and we coordinate material delivery and equipment access around your property's specific site conditions.
We complete the work to code, schedule and pass all required inspections, and walk you through the finished project before we leave. You are not required to be on-site during construction, but we are available to answer questions and provide updates throughout the build.
We serve homeowners throughout Malibu from Pacific Coast Highway to the inland canyons. Free estimate, no obligation, and we respond within one business day.
(805) 853-2176Malibu is a coastal city of about 13,000 residents stretching along the Pacific from the Los Angeles city limits west to the Ventura County line. The most recognizable areas are the beachfront communities along Pacific Coast Highway - including the Malibu Colony, Carbon Beach, and the stretch near Malibu Pier and Zuma Beach. These homes sit on or very close to the sand and deal with the most intense salt-air and moisture exposure in the area. Inland from PCH, the Santa Monica Mountains rise sharply, and neighborhoods like Malibu Park, Big Rock, and the communities along the canyon roads are made up of single-family homes on larger lots, many built in the 1960s through 1980s with wood-frame construction that has not been fully updated since.
The housing stock in Malibu is genuinely diverse, ranging from modest mid-century ranch homes on canyon roads to high-end custom builds worth several million dollars. A significant share of the city's homes were rebuilt or under reconstruction after the 2018 Woolsey Fire, which means newer construction and older neighboring homes often sit on the same street. Many properties - especially in the canyons and hills - rely on private septic systems and have long, winding driveways that require advance planning for large vehicle access. Malibu is also adjacent to Thousand Oaks to the north and east, and homeowners across that border often call us for the same coastal and hillside property expertise we bring to Malibu. We also regularly serve homeowners in Ventura up the coast.
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 MoreWhether your home is on the beach, on a hillside, or in one of the canyons, we serve all of Malibu. Call or submit today and hear back within one business day.