
FirstChoice Hesperia Sunrooms serves homeowners throughout Barstow with sunroom additions, four-season rooms, and patio enclosures built for the Mojave Desert climate. We have worked on homes from the older ranch neighborhoods near downtown to properties out toward Fort Irwin Road, and we build every room to handle 110-degree summers, freezing winter nights, and the high-wind events that come with living at this elevation.

Barstow's older ranch homes from the 1950s through the 1980s were built without any consideration for a future room addition, and the concrete patios attached to them are often cracked from decades of freeze-thaw movement. Our sunroom additions work starts with a slab assessment to determine whether the existing concrete can be the foundation or whether a new pour is needed before anything goes up. See our sunroom additions service page for full details.
Barstow sees summer highs above 110 degrees and winter lows in the 20s - a spread of nearly 90 degrees between the seasonal extremes. A four-season sunroom with full insulation, Low-E glass, and a dedicated mini-split handles that entire range without straining your home's existing HVAC system.
Barstow sits at the junction of Interstates 15 and 40 and sees regular windstorms that carry fine Mojave sand and grit across every exposed surface. A sealed patio enclosure keeps that blowing debris out while preserving the outdoor light and view that makes the desert setting worth looking at.
Barstow's spring and fall evenings can be genuinely comfortable once the heat breaks, but insects and blowing dust cut those pleasant hours short for homeowners without a screened space. A screen room extends your usable outdoor season at a fraction of the cost of a fully enclosed room.
Many Barstow homes have concrete patios poured 40 or 50 years ago that sit unused because there is no shade and no protection from the elements. If the slab is still structurally sound, converting it into an enclosed sunroom avoids the cost of a new foundation and puts that existing concrete to work.
Barstow's year-round sunshine is one of the genuine perks of living in the high desert, and an all-season room lets you capture that light without sitting in the heat. Properly built with insulated glazing and mechanical ventilation, these rooms make the most of the desert's best quality while filtering out its worst.
Barstow sits deep in the Mojave Desert at around 2,100 feet, and the climate here is one of the more demanding in Southern California. Summers regularly push above 100 degrees, and heat events above 110 degrees happen most years between June and August. That kind of sustained heat degrades roofing materials, caulk, window seals, and any exterior coating faster than most contractors from coastal or valley areas have ever encountered. A sunroom built with materials not rated for this temperature range will develop gaps, seal failures, and heat gain problems within just a few years. At the same time, winter nights in Barstow regularly drop into the low 20s Fahrenheit, creating a freeze-thaw cycle that is hard on concrete and any sealant that bridges two different building materials.
Most of Barstow's housing stock was built between the 1940s and the 1980s, during the city's growth as a railroad junction and proximity to Fort Irwin. These homes are single-story ranch-style houses on modest lots, often with stucco exteriors that have been slowly cracking for decades and concrete patios that have settled or heaved from the sandy desert soil beneath them. When we assess a Barstow property for a sunroom addition, we pay particular attention to the existing slab and foundation edges, because older concrete in this area often has more movement than it appears from the surface. Barstow also sits at the junction of Interstates 15 and 40, meaning high-wind events are a regular factor that affects how tightly we seal every window and door connection in the room.
Our crew works throughout Barstow regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom work here. The older ranch homes near downtown and along Main Street are built on foundations that were never designed for a room addition, which means the assessment and foundation planning phase is especially important before construction starts. We also see a significant number of homes with stucco exteriors that have hairline cracks where a new room would attach to the existing wall - catching and addressing those before we enclose the space prevents water intrusion from showing up later. We pull permits through the City of Barstow Building and Safety Department and manage every scheduled inspection so you do not have to coordinate those appointments yourself.
Barstow is a small city with a distinct character - the crossroads of Interstate 15 and Interstate 40 make it a gateway between Los Angeles and Las Vegas, and most locals know landmarks like Barstow Station and the Mojave River dry wash that runs through the center of town. Many homeowners here are connected to Fort Irwin and the National Training Center, which creates a steady population of residents who invest in their homes even with shorter planning horizons. We respect that and do not push scope beyond what makes sense for the property.
We also regularly serve homeowners in Yucca Valley, another high-desert community with similar climate challenges, and in Adelanto, which sits between Barstow and the rest of the High Desert. If you have questions about how work in Barstow compares to nearby areas, we are glad to walk through that on the free estimate call.
We respond within one business day of your call or message. We start by asking how you plan to use the room, what size you are thinking, and what your rough budget looks like. You do not need to have everything figured out - this conversation just helps us prepare for the on-site visit.
We come to your Barstow home, look at the existing patio or outdoor space, and check the concrete slab for freeze-thaw cracking or settlement from the sandy soil. This is where we determine whether the existing foundation is usable and give you a clear cost range before any work starts - no vague estimates.
We submit the permit application to the City of Barstow Building and Safety Department and handle the plan review process. Construction begins once the permit is approved, and we schedule work to avoid the worst heat windows during summer months so both the crew and the materials perform as expected.
We coordinate the city's final inspection and do a full walkthrough with you before we close out the project. We review how to maintain the room in the desert climate - including seasonal seal checks and filter care on the HVAC unit - so the room performs well for years.
We serve homeowners throughout Barstow and the surrounding Mojave Desert communities. No pressure, no obligation - just a free conversation about what makes sense for your home.
(760) 232-8375Barstow is a city of roughly 25,000 people in the western Mojave Desert, sitting at the confluence of Interstate 15 and Interstate 40. The city grew from a railroad junction and later expanded with the presence of Fort Irwin and the National Training Center, which employs thousands of military and civilian workers about 37 miles to the northeast. Most of the residential neighborhoods are made up of single-story ranch homes built between the 1940s and the 1980s, concentrated in the older neighborhoods near downtown and along the historic Route 66 corridor that passes through the city. The city sits at a natural crossroads that has shaped its character for more than a century, and local landmarks like Barstow Station and the nearby Calico Ghost Town give the area a distinct identity separate from the rest of the High Desert.
Homeownership in Barstow runs at roughly 50 percent, making it a true mixed community of owners and renters. Home values are lower than most of Southern California, which means homeowners here tend to be thoughtful about what improvements add real value versus what simply adds cost. Neighboring communities like Victorville and Hesperia are larger and have more housing variety, but Barstow has its own consistent identity as a working desert city with deep roots in the railroad and military history of the Mojave. We work here because homeowners in Barstow deserve the same quality of sunroom contractor that is available in bigger High Desert cities.
Add beautiful, livable space to your home with a custom sunroom addition.
Learn MoreEnjoy your sunroom comfortably year-round with full insulation and climate control.
Learn MoreA budget-friendly way to extend your living space through three seasons.
Learn MoreTransform your open patio into a protected, comfortable enclosed outdoor room.
Learn MoreExpert construction from foundation to finish for lasting, quality sunroom results.
Learn MoreRefresh or upgrade your existing sunroom with modern materials and improvements.
Learn MoreKeep pests out and fresh air in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed, functional sunroom space.
Learn MoreTurn an underused deck into a beautiful enclosed room for year-round enjoyment.
Learn MoreFully climate-controlled rooms you can use and enjoy every day of the year.
Learn MoreCreate a stylish enclosed outdoor room perfect for relaxing and entertaining.
Learn MoreMaximize natural light with a stunning glass solarium built for your home.
Learn MoreProtect your outdoor space from sun and rain with a durable patio cover.
Learn MoreLow-maintenance vinyl sunrooms that combine durability with great curb appeal.
Learn MoreSummer heat and winter freeze-thaw cycles do not wait, and neither does a good sunroom contractor. Call us now or submit a free estimate request and we will get back to you within one business day.