
Lompoc Sunrooms and Patios builds enclosed patio rooms, sunroom additions, and screen rooms for Guadalupe homeowners. Work is permitted through the City of Guadalupe, materials are chosen for coastal fog and salt air, and we respond to every inquiry within one business day.
Lompoc Sunrooms and Patios builds enclosed patio rooms, sunroom additions, and screen rooms for Guadalupe homeowners. Work is permitted through the City of Guadalupe, materials are chosen for coastal fog and salt air, and we respond to every inquiry within one business day.

Most Guadalupe homes are modest single-story houses with small covered patios that sit unused because the coastal fog keeps them damp in the morning and the afternoon winds off the valley make them uncomfortable later in the day. An enclosed patio room converts that space into a protected, usable room without starting from scratch on a new foundation.
Guadalupe homes built in the 1940s through 1970s typically have compact floor plans that no longer fit how families use a home today. A sunroom addition attached to the back of the house adds real square footage - a sitting room, a dining extension, or a bright home office - without the full disruption of a structural remodel on the main living space.
Guadalupe evenings can be pleasant once the fog burns off in spring and fall, but insects from the surrounding farmland make spending time outdoors after dark frustrating. A screened room over an existing patio slab is the most affordable way to make that outdoor space comfortable through the full warm season without committing to a full enclosure.
The strong afternoon winds that blow through the Santa Maria Valley drive rain and grit against unprotected patios and back doors, and homes near the Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes deal with windblown sand that wears on any unshielded surface. A solid patio cover deflects those conditions while keeping the outdoor space accessible and sheltered year-round.
Guadalupe does not see extreme cold - winters are mild and temperatures rarely drop below freezing. For homeowners who want an enclosed, protected room for nine to ten months of the year without the cost of full insulation and climate control, a three season sunroom is a practical fit for this coastal climate.
In a coastal environment like Guadalupe, vinyl framing outperforms painted wood and bare aluminum because it does not rust, corrode, or require repainting after repeated exposure to salt-laden fog. Vinyl sunrooms are a particularly practical choice here - they hold up to the moisture cycle that hammers other materials and require far less maintenance over their lifespan.
Guadalupe sits only about three miles from the Pacific Ocean, which means the marine layer that rolls in off the water is a daily reality for most of the year. That persistent coastal fog keeps humidity elevated and leaves exterior surfaces - siding, trim, window frames, and roofing materials - damp for hours every morning. Homes here deal with salt air that does not affect properties ten miles inland, and that difference matters when you are choosing materials for a sunroom, enclosure, or patio cover. Standard aluminum framing corrodes faster in this environment. Standard caulk fails sooner. Wood trim requires more frequent attention. Any contractor working in Guadalupe needs to spec for coastal conditions, not generic Central California ones.
The housing stock in Guadalupe is mostly older, with a large share of homes built between the 1940s and the early 1980s. These are typically wood-frame, stucco-exterior single-story houses on compact in-town lots. Older stucco cracks over time as the structure settles and seasons, and those cracks let moisture in behind the wall - a real problem in a foggy coastal environment. When we attach a sunroom or enclosure to an older stucco home, we inspect and address the transition point carefully rather than covering it up with new framing and hoping for the best. Homes on the edges of town are newer and built to more modern standards, but the coastal material requirements are the same regardless of age.
Permitted projects in Guadalupe go through the City of Guadalupe's building department, which handles plan review and inspection scheduling for projects within city limits. We pull permits here as part of our standard process and are familiar with the local review timeline, so projects are not delayed by permit surprises.
Guadalupe's main corridor is Guadalupe Street, the historic downtown spine lined with older storefronts and restaurants that have anchored the community for generations. The residential neighborhoods radiate off that core - mostly compact blocks of single-story homes with small backyard footprints. Properties near the Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes on the western edge of town deal with windblown sand that gets into every gap in a home's exterior, which is something we account for in how we seal enclosures and transitions on those properties.
We also regularly serve homeowners in neighboring Santa Maria, about ten miles to the north, where the larger city brings a different mix of housing types and permit requirements. Homeowners between Guadalupe and Casmalia to the northeast are also well within our regular service area.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We will ask a few basic questions about your project - patio size, what you want the room to do, and your general timeline - so the site visit is productive rather than starting from scratch.
We visit your property to measure the space, assess the existing slab and roof attachment point, and check the condition of the exterior wall where the enclosure will connect. The written estimate we give you after this visit is itemized so you know exactly what you are paying for - no ballpark numbers that change when the work starts.
Once you approve the estimate, we file for the City of Guadalupe building permit and order materials. City permit review typically takes two to three weeks. We keep you updated on where things stand so you know when construction is scheduled to begin.
On-site construction for a typical patio enclosure or screen room in Guadalupe takes one to two weeks. We schedule required inspections, clean up the work area each day, and walk the completed project with you before we consider the job done.
We serve Guadalupe and the surrounding area. Free estimates, no obligation, and a response within one business day.
(805) 291-8062Guadalupe is a small city of around 7,000 people in Santa Barbara County, situated in the flat agricultural expanse of the Santa Maria Valley just a few miles from the Pacific Ocean. The city was incorporated in 1906 and has maintained a tight-knit, working-class identity tied to the farming and ranching economy that surrounds it. Guadalupe Street forms the historic heart of town, lined with older storefronts and family-run restaurants that have anchored the community for decades. According to Wikipedia's entry on Guadalupe, the area is also known for its proximity to one of the largest coastal dune systems in the United States - the Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes - which stretch west of town toward the ocean.
The residential neighborhoods in Guadalupe consist largely of modest single-story wood-frame homes built between the 1940s and the early 1980s, many of them owner-occupied by long-term residents. There is some newer development on the edges of town, but the core of the city retains its mid-century character. Nearby Santa Maria to the north is the largest city in the region and the county seat of service for many residents, while Orcutt to the northeast has a higher concentration of newer residential development. Guadalupe itself remains a distinct community with its own city government, its own building department, and a proud local identity that residents carry with them.
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Learn MoreProjects fill up quickly in spring. Call or submit a request now and we will get back to you within one business day.