
Your Eastvale backyard should be usable in July, not just October. We build screened enclosures that block bugs, cut heat, and hold up through Santa Ana season.

Screened-in porches and screened decks in Eastvale let you enclose an outdoor living space with mesh walls so fresh air comes in but bugs, dust, and direct sun stay out, with most projects taking one to three weeks from first day of construction depending on whether a new deck platform is needed.
If your Eastvale backyard sits empty from June through September because of heat, flies, or blowing dust from Santa Ana winds, a screened enclosure changes that completely. Many homeowners who already have a concrete patio slab are surprised to find they can add a full screen room without building a new deck from scratch. If your current slab needs work first, we also handle pool deck construction and outdoor flatwork, so everything can be coordinated through one call.
Eastvale's HOA-dense master-planned neighborhoods add one more step to every project - architectural committee approval before permits are even submitted. We know that process and handle it as part of every job.
If your patio furniture sits untouched from June through September because it is simply too hot and too buggy, that is the clearest sign. Eastvale regularly hits the high 90s and triple digits, and an unshaded open patio can feel unbearable by mid-morning. A screened enclosure with solar mesh creates a space that is genuinely comfortable even on the hottest afternoons.
If every Santa Ana wind event leaves your cushions, furniture, and surfaces covered in fine dust, you are spending hours cleaning just to stay ahead of it. The Inland Empire wind corridor sends that dust directly through open patios. A screened enclosure acts as a barrier, so your outdoor space stays clean and ready to use even after a windy week.
You have a good concrete slab or deck in the backyard but rarely go out there because it feels too open - too much sun, too many flies, no defined space. Adding a screen enclosure around your existing structure can transform it into a room you actually want to spend time in without tearing out what you already have.
In many Eastvale neighborhoods, pergolas and large freestanding additions face tight HOA restrictions. A screened porch attached to the house often has a clearer approval path because it is treated as a home extension rather than a separate structure. If other backyard projects have stalled at the HOA stage, this is worth exploring.
We build screened enclosures two ways: adding a screen structure around an existing concrete slab or deck, or constructing the full deck platform first and then enclosing it. For homeowners who want shade and weather protection without full screening, covered decks and patio covers are a popular alternative that pairs well with screen work. If you want the look of an open outdoor room with a defined overhead structure, pergola installation is another option we offer that some homeowners combine with partial screening.
Every project includes a permit pulled through the City of Eastvale, HOA submission support where your neighborhood requires it, and a final city inspection before we consider the job complete. We stock standard fiberglass mesh, solar screen mesh for heat reduction, and pet-resistant mesh for households with dogs or cats. The right mesh choice depends on which direction your porch faces and how you plan to use the space - we go through that during the estimate visit.
Best for homeowners who already have a solid concrete patio and want to add walls and a roof without starting over.
Best for homeowners who want a new elevated platform enclosed with screening from the ground up.
Best for south- or west-facing porches where afternoon sun and heat are the main problem to solve.
Best for households with dogs or cats who will be using the screened space regularly and need a tougher mesh.
Eastvale sits in the western Inland Empire where summer temperatures climb into the high 90s and triple digits for weeks at a stretch. The sun angle and intensity here are more extreme than coastal Southern California, which is why the type of mesh you choose matters much more than it would in a milder climate. Solar screen mesh that blocks a meaningful portion of heat and UV light can drop the felt temperature inside a screened enclosure enough to make evening meals and weekend mornings genuinely pleasant. Homeowners in Corona and Norco face the same Inland Empire heat and ask us the same questions - the right screening solution is consistent across this whole corridor.
Eastvale was built largely in the 2000s and 2010s as a master-planned community, which means most homes already have a concrete patio slab in the backyard and most neighborhoods are governed by HOAs. The existing slab is often good news - if it is level and in sound condition, it can serve as the foundation for your screen enclosure without the cost of a new platform. The HOA piece means extra lead time: you need architectural committee approval before the city permit process even starts, and some boards meet only once a month. We have worked through this process in Eastvale neighborhoods and we factor it into your project schedule from day one.
Call or submit the form and we reply within one business day. We will ask a few basic questions about your space so we come to the estimate visit prepared rather than wasting your time.
We visit your backyard, measure the space, and assess your existing slab or deck. You get a written estimate covering size, mesh type, roof structure, and the permit and HOA timeline - no surprises after you sign.
We prepare the drawings and help you submit to your HOA for architectural approval. Once that comes through, we file the city permit. Plan for two to four weeks total for this phase - we keep you updated throughout.
The build runs one to two weeks once permits are in hand, starting with any framing and finishing with screen installation. We schedule the city inspection and do a final walkthrough with you before we leave the site.
Free estimate, written quote, and we handle the permit and HOA paperwork.
(909) 479-6940Most Eastvale neighborhoods require HOA architectural approval before the city permit process starts, and some boards only meet monthly. We handle the submission paperwork and factor that timeline into your project schedule from the first conversation so you are never caught waiting and wondering.
We stock and recommend solar screen mesh rated for the heat and UV intensity this region delivers. It is not the cheapest option, but it is the one that makes your porch genuinely comfortable on a 100-degree afternoon rather than just slightly shadier than the open patio.
We pull every permit through the City of Eastvale and are present for every city inspection. A passed inspection on file protects you at resale and means your homeowner's insurance covers the structure - skipping that step costs homeowners far more in the long run.
You can check our California contractor license in about two minutes on the Contractors State License Board website. A valid license means we carry the required insurance and can be held accountable if anything goes wrong - a basic protection you should demand from any contractor before signing.
These credentials matter together. HOA familiarity keeps your project from stalling before it starts, the right mesh makes the space usable rather than decorative, and proper permitting protects everything you invest. That is the combination that produces a screened porch Eastvale homeowners actually use for years.
Permit requirements sourced from the City of Eastvale Building and Safety Department. Industry standards referenced from the North American Deck and Railing Association.
A solid or lattice roof over your existing patio or deck gives you shade and rain protection without full enclosure.
Learn MoreAn open-beam pergola defines your outdoor space and can be combined with partial screening or shade cloth.
Learn MoreEastvale summers book our calendar fast - reach out now and we will lock in your project date before the busy season starts.