SunRooma Ventura Sunrooms serves Newbury Park homeowners with enclosed patio rooms, custom sunrooms, and four-season additions that hold up to Conejo Valley summers and Santa Ana wind events. We reply within one business day and handle every permit.

Many Newbury Park homes built in the 1970s and 1980s have covered patios that sit unused for months because the afternoon heat or the fall Santa Ana winds make them uncomfortable. Enclosing that space turns it into a room you can actually use. See our full enclosed patio rooms service for details on what the process involves.
Newbury Park has a mix of older ranch homes with non-standard footprints and newer planned-community houses with HOA restrictions on exterior finishes. A custom sunroom is designed around what your specific lot and house allow, not forced into a catalog size that does not fit.
Newbury Park summers regularly hit the 90s inland, and a fully insulated four-season sunroom keeps the heat out while letting in the light. With proper low-e glazing and insulated framing, this becomes a comfortable home office or family room that works in every month of the year.
Homes near the Santa Monica Mountains deal with more dust, debris, and dried brush than properties in flat urban areas. A patio enclosure keeps all of that out while preserving the outdoor feel that Newbury Park homeowners value from their hillside and open-land locations.
For Newbury Park homeowners who want to extend spring through fall use of an outdoor area without the cost of full climate control, a three-season sunroom is a practical middle ground. It blocks insects, wind, and light rain while keeping the open-air feeling that makes this part of the Conejo Valley worth living in.
With median home values in Thousand Oaks and Newbury Park consistently above $700,000, a permitted sunroom addition represents a meaningful improvement to one of the area's most valuable assets. Properly permitted and inspected additions also protect resale value, which matters in a market where buyers scrutinize disclosure reports closely.
Most homes in Newbury Park were built between the 1960s and 1980s. That means a large share of the housing stock is now 40 to 60 years old, with original stucco exteriors, aging electrical panels, and slabs that were poured to the standards of that era. A sunroom addition on a 1972 ranch home involves different structural decisions than one on a newer build - older slabs may need reinforcement before a heavy glazed structure is anchored to them, and original stucco requires specific flashing and waterproofing approaches to prevent water from getting behind the attachment point.
Newbury Park also sits in a high fire hazard severity zone, bordered on multiple sides by the dry brush and open land of the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area. That proximity affects material choices: ember-resistant vents, fire-rated glazing options, and frames that do not provide easy ignition points are worth discussing with your contractor before you finalize a design. The Santa Ana winds that sweep through the Conejo Valley each fall add structural wind load requirements that a contractor who only works in coastal cities may not design for automatically.
Our crew works throughout Newbury Park regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Permits for Newbury Park projects go through the City of Thousand Oaks Building and Safety Division - and knowing how that plan check process works, what detail level inspectors expect on structural drawings, and how to respond to correction notices without losing weeks is something that only comes from doing it repeatedly.
The Newbury Park community sits alongside the 101 Freeway corridor, with older subdivisions clustered near Borchard Community Park and newer planned developments extending toward the hills. Hillside lots east of Wendy Drive tend to have sloped yards and tiered retaining walls that affect how a sunroom or patio enclosure can be attached and graded. We also work regularly in Thousand Oaks, which shares the same permit jurisdiction and gives us consistent familiarity with local review timelines.
Newer HOA-governed communities in Newbury Park typically require architectural committee approval before any exterior modification begins. We help homeowners prepare the documentation those committees require, which means the HOA review and the city permit review can run in parallel rather than sequentially - avoiding the weeks of delay that come from doing them one after the other.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We ask a few questions about your space and what you are hoping to accomplish so we can come prepared.
We visit your Newbury Park property to assess the existing slab, wall attachment points, lot slope, and HOA constraints before writing a number. Phone estimates on Conejo Valley homes are not accurate - what your lot and structure actually allow determines the real cost.
We handle the permit application with Thousand Oaks Building and Safety and coordinate any required HOA submittal at the same time. Construction begins once permits are approved, typically within four to eight weeks of application.
City inspectors conduct required inspections at framing and finish stages. Once the final inspection is signed off, we walk through the completed space with you and address any punch-list items before we close out the project.
We serve Newbury Park and the surrounding Conejo Valley. No pressure, no obligation - just a straight conversation about what your project involves.
(805) 869-0344Newbury Park is one of the main communities that makes up the City of Thousand Oaks in Ventura County. It grew rapidly during the 1960s through 1980s as a suburb, and that growth era defined most of the neighborhood's housing character: single-story and two-story ranch homes on modest to medium lots, with stucco exteriors and covered patios that were standard features of that period. Today, those same homes are 40 to 60 years old and increasingly in need of updates, including the patio and outdoor living improvements that new owners and long-term residents alike are prioritizing. Newer planned communities built from the 1990s onward sit alongside those older subdivisions, bringing HOA-governed neighborhoods with different rules about exterior modifications. Learn more at the Newbury Park Wikipedia article.
The community borders the Santa Monica Mountains to the south and the broader Conejo Valley hills on multiple sides. That setting makes for beautiful views and easy trail access, but it also places Newbury Park squarely in a high fire hazard zone and puts it in the path of seasonal Santa Ana winds. Homeowners here are accustomed to planning for both. We also serve nearby Thousand Oaks and Camarillo, where we encounter many of the same housing conditions and similar permit requirements.
Add beautiful, light-filled living space to your home with a custom sunroom.
Learn MoreEnjoy your sunroom year-round with a fully insulated four-season design.
Learn MoreExtend your outdoor season with a comfortable, screened three-season room.
Learn MoreCall today or request a free estimate online - we schedule on-site visits within the week and respond to all inquiries within one business day.