Oxnard Sunrooms and Patios installs patio enclosures, screen rooms, and sunroom additions in Port Hueneme using salt-air-rated materials built to last near the Pacific. We have served the Ventura County coast since 2019 and reply to every inquiry within one business day.

Port Hueneme homes sit close together on small lots, and an open patio faces the full force of the coastal wind and salt air every day of the year. A properly built patio enclosure turns that exposed slab into a protected, usable room and shields the space from salt corrosion, coastal fog, and the winter rain that rolls in off the Pacific each year.
The mild temperature near Hueneme Beach makes outdoor sitting comfortable almost year-round, but coastal insects and the occasional marine layer wind make fully open patios less pleasant than they could be. A screened room keeps the air moving and the bugs out without closing off the ocean breeze that makes living here worth it.
Port Hueneme's older ranch homes often have small interior square footage relative to the lot, and a sunroom addition is one of the most cost-effective ways to add usable living space. We build additions that attach cleanly to the existing structure using marine-grade materials specified for this area's salt-air environment.
Summer afternoons in Port Hueneme are sunny enough to make an uncovered patio uncomfortable even with the ocean breeze. A well-built patio cover provides reliable shade for outdoor dining and relaxing, and it dramatically slows the UV degradation of whatever furniture and surfaces sit underneath it.
Vinyl framing is an especially practical choice in Port Hueneme because it does not corrode from salt air the way standard aluminum does. A vinyl sunroom holds its appearance and structural integrity longer in a coastal environment, which matters a lot when your home is blocks from the Pacific.
Some older Port Hueneme homes have enclosed patios or sunrooms built in the 1970s and 1980s with materials that were not designed for long-term coastal exposure. Those structures often have corroded hardware, fogged panels, and gaps at the framing joints. Remodeling the existing enclosure with current materials usually costs less than replacing it entirely.
Port Hueneme sits right on the Pacific coast, and that location creates conditions that are genuinely different from anything even a few miles inland. Airborne salt from the ocean deposits on every exposed surface year-round - metal fasteners, framing connectors, and hardware that would last 20 years in Thousand Oaks might corrode badly in Port Hueneme within five. Coastal fog keeps exterior surfaces damp every morning, which means wood, paint, and standard sealants break down faster than they do in drier inland conditions. Any sunroom or patio enclosure built in this city without marine-grade hardware and sealed framing is going to show signs of failure sooner than the homeowner expects.
Most homes in Port Hueneme were built between the 1950s and 1980s - older housing stock by California standards - and attaching new structures to homes of this age requires understanding what is already there. The flat, low-lying terrain near the coast also means that concrete slabs and foundations have had decades of exposure to moisture from below as well as above. We assess the existing slab and foundation conditions before committing to a project scope, and we work within the requirements of the City of Port Hueneme Building Division for permits and inspections on every project.
Our crew works throughout Port Hueneme regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and patio enclosure work in this city. We pull permits through the City of Port Hueneme and are familiar with the plan-check requirements for room additions in this municipality. Port Hueneme is a compact city - about 4.5 square miles - so the permit office and inspection process are straightforward to navigate when you know the local process.
The city's housing is concentrated near Hueneme Beach and the Port Hueneme Pier on the west side, with streets getting progressively denser and more varied in housing type as you move inland toward the Naval Base Ventura County boundary. Homes closer to the beach tend to be older ranch houses or newer townhomes with HOA-managed exteriors. Homes further east toward the Oxnard border are a mix of older single-family properties that have changed hands several times. Access on the small lots in the denser blocks requires planning for equipment and materials staging, which is something we account for in the estimate. We also serve homeowners in nearby Ventura, which shares the same coastal construction conditions as Port Hueneme.
Call or submit the contact form and we get back to you within one business day. We schedule a free on-site visit at a time that works for you - there is no cost and no obligation at this stage.
We assess the existing slab, structure, and lot conditions - including any HOA requirements if you are in a managed community near the beach. You receive a detailed written estimate that covers materials, labor, and permit fees before we ask you to commit to anything.
We submit permits to the City of Port Hueneme and manage the review process. Construction begins after permits are approved, typically one to three weeks from submission depending on the project type and current review volume.
We schedule and pass the final City of Port Hueneme inspection, then walk you through the finished structure to make sure everything is as agreed before we close out the project.
We serve all of Port Hueneme with salt-air-rated materials and a process designed for coastal homes. Free estimates, no pressure, responses within one business day.
(805) 853-2176Port Hueneme is one of the smallest cities in Ventura County, covering about 4.5 square miles along the Pacific coast. It is home to the only commercial deep-water port between Los Angeles and San Francisco, and Naval Base Ventura County (NBVC) sits directly adjacent to the city, giving Port Hueneme a working-port character that distinguishes it from the suburban cities nearby. Hueneme Beach is the most well-known spot in the city - a public beach with a fishing pier that draws both residents and visitors year-round. Most of the housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1980s, and the city has a higher proportion of renters than most of Ventura County, partly because of the rotating military population stationed at NBVC.
The residential streets closest to the beach are a mix of older single-family ranch homes and newer townhome and condo developments that were built in the 1990s and 2000s closer to the waterfront. Density increases near the city center and decreases toward the eastern boundary with Oxnard. Port Hueneme is connected to the broader Ventura County area via Hueneme Road and Saviers Road, and the city borders Oxnard on three sides. We also serve homeowners in nearby Oxnard, which shares the same coastal construction environment and is just across the city line.
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 MoreCoastal projects book out quickly in spring - reach out today to schedule your free estimate and get a written quote with no obligation.