
VSP Visalia Sunrooms & Patios designs and builds custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Dinuba homeowners throughout Tulare County - from the older stucco homes near Alta Avenue downtown to the newer subdivisions on the north side of the city. We have been serving Dinuba and the surrounding San Joaquin Valley since 2023, and every project is permitted through the City of Dinuba and designed for the dry heat and clay soils that define outdoor construction in this part of the Valley.

Dinuba homes vary widely in footprint and backyard layout, and a stock sunroom package rarely fits the way a properly designed one does. Our custom sunrooms are drawn to match your specific lot, your existing roof line, and the proportions of your house - so the addition looks like it belongs rather than like something bolted on from a catalog. Every detail, from the glass type to the roofline pitch, is chosen for Dinuba's climate and your home's style.
A large share of Dinuba homes built in the 1950s and 1960s have a simple covered patio off the back of the house that has never been enclosed. Converting that existing covered slab into a finished room is typically the fastest way to add usable square footage to a Dinuba home without major excavation or new foundation work. We work with your existing slab and cover structure wherever the conditions allow.
Dinuba is surrounded by vineyards and citrus groves, and the insects and fine dust that come with agricultural land make open-air outdoor living less comfortable than it should be. A screened enclosure keeps the yard air moving while filtering out the particulates and pests that blow in from the surrounding fields. It is a popular choice for Dinuba homeowners who want to use the backyard from March through November.
A four-season sunroom in Dinuba is fully insulated, properly glazed with low-SHGC glass, and served by a dedicated climate control unit - because Dinuba summers regularly push above 105 degrees and tule fog rolls through in winter. Many long-term Dinuba homeowners choose a four-season room when they want a true additional room they can use year-round rather than a seasonal porch.
Older Dinuba homes tend to be smaller than today's new construction - often under 1,500 square feet. A sunroom addition expands the livable footprint outward from the home, adding a bright, glass-walled room that connects to the backyard without requiring a full room addition with drywall and interior finish work throughout. It is a natural way to grow a home that was built for a different generation's space needs.
Dinuba's long growing season and abundant sunshine make solariums a natural fit for homeowners who want to grow plants year-round or bring the outdoors in through a fully glazed space. A properly designed solarium for this climate uses glass that manages solar heat gain, so the room fills with light without becoming unbearably hot during the summer months.
Most of Dinuba's housing stock was built between the 1940s and 1970s - modest, single-story homes on in-town lots that were practical for agricultural working families. Many of these homes have never had a major structural addition, so when a homeowner decides to add a sunroom or enclose a patio, the existing framing, slab, and roof conditions can vary significantly depending on who built the original house and when. A contractor who has worked on these older Dinuba homes knows how to read the existing structure before drawing a single design line - because assuming a 1960s slab is level and square is a mistake that shows up during framing.
The climate in Tulare County is one of the defining factors in any outdoor construction project in Dinuba. Summer temperatures regularly reach 100 to 105 degrees from June through September, with almost no humidity and very little rain from May through October. That combination of dry heat accelerates stucco cracking, degrades sealants at window and door openings, and bakes any outdoor structure that lacks proper insulation. The clay soils throughout this part of the Valley shrink in the dry summer heat and expand when the rains arrive in fall and winter - that seasonal movement is why so many Dinuba driveways and concrete patios develop cracks over time. Tule fog settles in during December and January, bringing prolonged damp conditions that can push moisture into any crawl space or attic that is not properly sealed.
Our crew works throughout Dinuba regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Dinuba on every project and manage the inspection process from start to close-out. Homeowners never have to track permit status or coordinate with the building department on their own.
Dinuba sits about 25 miles northeast of Visalia and roughly 35 miles southeast of Fresno, just off State Route 99. The historic downtown area along Alta Avenue is surrounded by some of the older, smaller homes in the city - single-story stucco with small yards and detached carports. The north side of the city has newer subdivisions built in the 1990s and 2000s, with larger floor plans and tile roofs. We have worked in both parts of town and know the differences in construction that come with each era. The city is surrounded by raisin grape vineyards, navel orange groves, and peach orchards that define the local landscape - and push fine dust into the air during harvest that settles on every surface.
We also serve the communities that surround Dinuba. Homeowners in Reedley to the north and Porterville to the south are part of our regular service area. If you are in Dinuba and want a sunroom or patio enclosure built the right way for this climate, we are ready to help.
Call or submit the contact form and we will reply within one business day. We will ask about your home, what you have in mind, and your general timeline before we set up a site visit.
We come to your Dinuba property, assess the existing slab, framing, and roof conditions, and give you a detailed written estimate. No guesswork, no hidden line items - you know what the project costs before we start.
We file the permit application with the City of Dinuba and begin construction once it is approved. We keep you informed at each stage and let you know if anything on-site requires a decision from you.
Once construction is complete we do a final walkthrough with you to confirm everything is right, then close out the permit with the City of Dinuba. You get a finished space with a clean paper trail on record.
We serve Dinuba and all of Tulare County. Free estimates, no pressure, no obligation. Reply within one business day.
(559) 557-4911Dinuba is a city of about 25,000 people in Tulare County, sitting in the middle of the San Joaquin Valley between Fresno and Visalia. The city grew alongside the agricultural economy that still defines it - raisin grape vineyards, navel orange groves, and stone fruit orchards surround the city on all sides. The historic commercial heart of town runs along Alta Avenue, and many of the residential streets nearby are lined with older single-story stucco homes that have housed working families for generations. According to U.S. Census data, a large share of Dinuba's homes are owner-occupied - families who have stayed in the same house for many years and invest in maintaining and improving it.
The city is a standalone community, not a suburb - residents drive to Fresno or Visalia for larger shopping or medical care, but most daily life happens in Dinuba. The Dinuba Farmers Market reflects the city's deep roots in agriculture and is a regular gathering point for the community. Nearby Reedley to the north - known as the "World Fruit Basket" for its fruit-growing heritage - sits just a short drive away, and the gateway to Kings Canyon National Park is visible on clear days from the eastern edge of town. We serve homeowners across this part of the Valley, including in Porterville and the surrounding Tulare County communities.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreFloor-to-ceiling glass solariums that maximize natural light indoors.
Learn MoreWe reply within one business day. Every project is permitted, built for the Valley heat, and backed by our workmanship guarantee.