
Camarillo Sunrooms and Patios builds custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and four-season rooms throughout Thousand Oaks and the Conejo Valley. We have served Ventura County homeowners since 2016 and respond within one business day.

Thousand Oaks has a wide variety of home styles - from single-story ranch homes in established neighborhoods to larger two-story homes in hillside communities like Lynn Ranch. Our custom sunroom design process starts with your specific house, not a catalog - so the room matches your architecture and fits the site conditions on your property.
Thousand Oaks summers push into the mid-90s, and Santa Ana winds dry everything out in the fall. A fully insulated four-season room with a proper HVAC connection gives you a comfortable space from January through September without fighting the outdoor temperature every time you step in.
Many Thousand Oaks ranch homes were built with large covered patios that are underused for most of the year. Enclosing that space with glass or screen panels adds functional square footage to your home and protects existing patio surfaces from UV damage and wind-blown debris.
Thousand Oaks evenings are comfortable much of the year, but homes backing up to open space and hillsides deal with more insects than properties in denser neighborhoods. A screen room lets you enjoy those evenings outdoors without being bothered, and it keeps the patio usable through warm weather without air conditioning.
Some Thousand Oaks homes already have a sunroom or enclosed patio from original construction in the 1970s or 1980s that is drafty, poorly glazed, or simply dated. We remodel existing enclosures to current energy standards - upgrading glazing, improving insulation, and replacing aging frames - so you get the usability you were expecting all along.
Intense summer sun in Thousand Oaks can make a south- or west-facing patio unusable from noon onward. A solid or louvered patio cover drops the surface temperature significantly and extends the time you can actually spend out there - without requiring a full enclosure or permit-intensive construction.
The bulk of Thousand Oaks was built between the mid-1960s and the mid-1990s, which puts the city's housing stock squarely in the age range where original roofing, insulation, and exterior finishes are due for updates. Ranch-style and Spanish-style stucco homes dominate the residential landscape throughout the Conejo Valley, and adding a sunroom to either style involves specific knowledge about how stucco exterior walls behave and how clay tile roofs tie into new construction. A contractor unfamiliar with this building stock will run into problems that a crew working here regularly handles as a matter of course.
The terrain adds its own set of considerations. A significant number of Thousand Oaks homes back up to hillsides, canyon edges, or open space - and those sites come with sloped lots, retaining walls, and expansive clay soils that shift seasonally. The Santa Ana wind events that move through the Conejo Valley in fall are also more intense here than in coastal areas, meaning framing and glazing need to be designed and installed to handle that load. On top of that, much of Thousand Oaks falls within a designated Fire Hazard Severity Zone, which means ignition-resistant construction materials are not optional in some neighborhoods - they are required by local ordinance.
Our crew works throughout Thousand Oaks regularly, and we pull permits from the City of Thousand Oaks Community Development Department for local projects. We understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and patio enclosure work here - including the fire-zone material requirements that apply to neighborhoods near open space and the hillside drainage issues that affect sloped-lot properties throughout the city.
Thousand Oaks covers a large geographic area, and the neighborhoods within it feel distinct from each other. The older ranch homes along Moorpark Road and in Conejo Oaks are different properties from the newer two-story homes in Lang Ranch or the larger hillside parcels in Lynn Ranch. We have worked in all of these areas and know what the housing stock actually looks like - from standard ranch slabs to canyon-adjacent lots with drainage features built into the yard. The Conejo Valley's identity as a stable, long-term community is well established, and we treat every project accordingly.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Newbury Park, which sits directly adjacent to Thousand Oaks along the 101. If your property is in the Thousand Oaks city limits or anywhere in the surrounding Conejo Valley, call us and we will confirm availability within the same business day.
We respond to all Thousand Oaks inquiries within one business day. A quick call or message tells us what you are thinking, and we can tell you right away whether the project sounds like something we handle regularly.
We come to your Thousand Oaks property, assess the existing structure, measure the space, and review site conditions - including any slope, drainage, or fire-zone factors. The written estimate you receive covers scope, materials, and price, and it costs you nothing.
Once you approve the estimate, we submit the permit application to the City of Thousand Oaks. We manage the review process and give you a realistic start date - most permits here take two to four weeks. We also handle any plan check corrections that come back during review.
Our crew completes the build and schedules all required city inspections. We walk through the finished room with you to confirm everything matches the scope you approved before we close the job.
We come to your Thousand Oaks home, review your space and site conditions, and give you a detailed written quote at no charge.
(805) 586-6135Thousand Oaks is a planned city of roughly 126,000 people in the Conejo Valley, situated between Ventura County and Los Angeles County along the 101 freeway. The city developed rapidly from the early 1960s through the 1990s, resulting in well-established residential neighborhoods with mature trees and large lots. Distinct communities within the city include Newbury Park to the west, Lynn Ranch and Conejo Oaks along the hillsides, and Lang Ranch toward the eastern edge - each with its own character and housing stock. The Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area borders the city to the south, and large areas of surrounding land are protected open space, giving many properties direct views of undeveloped hillsides and canyons. A notable city landmark is The Gardens of the World, a free public garden maintained by the city that draws visitors from throughout the Conejo Valley.
The city consistently ranks among the most livable and safest cities in California, which has made it a destination for long-term residents and families who invest in their properties over many years. Major employers like Amgen, headquartered in Thousand Oaks since 1980, and the Conejo Valley Unified School District provide stable employment that supports a homeowner base focused on property investment and improvement. Thousand Oaks sits adjacent to Newbury Park and is not far from Moorpark to the north - two communities we also serve regularly throughout the year.
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 MoreCall us today or submit a free estimate request online. We serve homeowners throughout Thousand Oaks and the Conejo Valley and respond within one business day.