
Camarillo Sunrooms and Patios builds sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Fillmore homeowners. We know the Santa Clara River Valley's clay soils and hot summers, pull permits from the City of Fillmore, and reply within one business day.

Many Fillmore homes built between the 1940s and 1980s have open backyard slabs or covered patios that are the right footprint for a sunroom addition. Enclosing that space turns an underused outdoor area into a room you can actually live in through the long, hot summers.
Fillmore summers push well into the 90s, and an open patio becomes unusable during the hottest weeks. A patio enclosure with screened or glazed panels keeps the heat manageable while still letting in the natural light that makes outdoor-adjacent rooms worth having.
Fillmore sits adjacent to active agricultural land, and evening insects are a real issue in many neighborhoods. A screen room gives you the airflow of an open patio with full protection from bugs, making spring and fall evenings genuinely comfortable outside.
Fillmore's mild winters mean most homeowners only need a room that is comfortable from early spring through late fall. A three-season sunroom delivers that without the added cost of a fully insulated year-round enclosure - it is often the right fit for this climate.
The valley location means Fillmore gets intense sun from May through October. A solid patio cover extends the life of any outdoor furniture and makes the patio usable during afternoon hours when direct sun would otherwise drive you inside.
Older Fillmore homes often have existing covered patios attached to the back of the house that were built for a different era of outdoor living. Converting that structure into a proper enclosed sunroom upgrades it from a weathered roof-and-post to a finished room that adds value.
Fillmore is tucked into the Santa Clara River Valley, and much of the land under the city has clay-heavy soils that expand when wet and contract during the dry season. That seasonal movement is a problem for any concrete slab that is not specifically designed for it. Cracks in driveways and walkways around Fillmore are often a visible sign of what these soils do over time. When we build a sunroom foundation here, we account for that expansion rather than pouring a generic slab and hoping for the best. The difference shows up years later, when your foundation is still level and your neighbors' slabs have started to heave.
Most homes in Fillmore were built between the 1940s and 1980s, which means the housing stock has real character but also requires a contractor who is comfortable working with older structures rather than just new construction. Older homes often have non-standard framing, original concrete that needs testing before you attach to it, and setback situations that differ from newer planned communities. The City of Fillmore also has its own permitting process, and understanding how they review structural plans for accessory structures saves time and avoids surprises during the project.
Our crew works throughout Fillmore regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The city is small enough that we know the difference between the older in-town neighborhoods near Central Avenue and the newer subdivisions built out toward the edges of town - and those two areas have meaningfully different home types, lot grades, and foundation conditions.
Fillmore is one of the few genuinely small agricultural towns left in Ventura County, and that character shapes the housing. You see older bungalows and Craftsman-style homes near downtown, mid-century ranch homes throughout the core neighborhoods, and a handful of newer tracts on the western and northern edges. We work on all of them. Highway 126 connects Fillmore to Santa Paula to the west and to the rest of Ventura County, and it is the route our crew takes when serving jobs across the valley. The Fillmore and Western Railway depot near Central Avenue is one of the landmarks we use when giving homeowners directions to their own neighborhoods during the estimate visit.
We also regularly serve homeowners in nearby Santa Paula, just down Highway 126 to the west, and in communities throughout the eastern end of Ventura County. If you are not sure whether your address is in our service area, call and we will confirm the same day.
We reply to all inquiries within one business day. Call, use the contact form, or send a message - there is no commitment, just a conversation about what you are looking for and whether your project is a fit for us.
We visit your Fillmore home, measure the space, check the existing slab or foundation conditions, and note any site-specific details that affect the build. You get a written estimate at no charge - and for older homes, that site visit often surfaces issues that a phone estimate would miss entirely.
Once you approve the estimate, we handle the permit application with the City of Fillmore Building Division. We give you a realistic start date so you can plan around construction. Permit turnaround in Fillmore typically runs two to four weeks.
Our crew completes the build from start to finish. When the work is done, we walk the space with you, confirm all inspections have passed, and make sure everything matches the scope you signed off on before we consider the job complete.
We serve Fillmore and the surrounding Santa Clara Valley communities. Free estimates, no commitment, one business day response.
(805) 586-6135Fillmore is a small city of about 15,000 residents tucked into the Santa Clara River Valley in eastern Ventura County. It sits between Santa Paula to the west and the Sespe Wilderness to the north, with working citrus groves running right to the edge of town. The city is commonly described as one of the last remaining small agricultural towns in Ventura County - it has resisted the large-scale planned development that changed other nearby communities, which is why the housing stock still has variety and character. Most homes are single-family detached houses, and the homeownership rate is solid. Per the city's profile, the bulk of the housing was built between the 1940s and 1980s, with some older Craftsman bungalows near downtown dating to the early 1900s.
Downtown Fillmore centers on Central Avenue, which still has historic storefronts and the 1887 Southern Pacific depot that the Fillmore and Western Railway runs excursions from today. The neighborhoods closest to downtown include some of the oldest homes, while the streets on the western and northern edges of town have newer ranch homes and a few more recent subdivisions. Fillmore borders Santa Paula to the west and is within easy reach of the broader Ventura County service network that includes Ventura. Whether your home is near the historic depot or out by the newer subdivisions on the edge of town, we serve all of Fillmore.
Enjoy your sunroom year-round with fully insulated four-season construction.
Learn MoreGlass-roof solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that protect your outdoor space from the elements.
Learn MoreWe serve Fillmore homeowners throughout the Santa Clara Valley. Call today or submit the contact form and we will respond within one business day.