
Porterville Sunrooms & Patios serves Springville with screen room installation, patio covers, and sunroom additions designed for foothill properties along Highway 190 - homes that deal with fire-zone requirements, tree debris, freeze-thaw winters, and summers that push above 95 degrees at elevation. We have served Tulare County since 2017 and reply within one business day.

Springville properties sit close to the Tule River and are surrounded by oaks and pines, which means insects, pollen, and leaf debris are part of outdoor life here year-round. A screen room gives you the cool evening air and the foothill views without the bugs and debris that come with every open porch in this area.
Most Springville homes sit under or near mature trees, and a solid patio cover keeps leaf litter, pine needles, and bird debris off your outdoor furniture and slab. It also shields your back patio from the intense afternoon sun that bakes foothill properties all summer, making the space usable through more of the warm season.
Springville's shoulder seasons - spring and fall - are the best months to be outside, and a three season sunroom captures those months without the full HVAC investment of a year-round room. For foothill homeowners who want to enjoy the Sequoia National Forest views from a comfortable space during April, May, October, and November, this is often the right fit.
Older Springville homes often have an open covered porch or concrete slab that sits unused because it catches too much debris from nearby trees and gets too hot in July. Enclosing that existing structure with weather panels and screens is a practical upgrade that costs less than a full addition and works with the lot and structure you already have.
Springville homes on large rural lots often have generous rear yards with room to extend the footprint. A sunroom addition puts real living space on the back of the house at a lower cost per square foot than conventional framed construction, and it pairs well with the views and natural surroundings that make this part of the foothills worth living in.
At 1,150 feet elevation, Springville sees overnight freezes in winter and summer heat that climbs well above 90 degrees. A four season sunroom with insulated panels and a climate-control connection handles both extremes and gives you a room you can use in January when the mountain storms roll through and in August when the valley air pushes up the canyon.
Springville is an unincorporated foothill community in Tulare County with a population around 1,000 to 1,500 people. Most homes here were built decades ago - many before 1980 - on large rural lots with wood-frame construction, composition or metal roofing, and mature trees growing close to the structure. That combination of age, tree proximity, and foothill terrain creates a set of conditions that a sunroom contractor working primarily in suburban neighborhoods will not have encountered. The attachment point on an older wood-frame home needs careful evaluation before any addition goes on. Fire-resistant material choices matter in Springville because the community sits in a high fire-hazard severity zone designated by CAL FIRE, and ember-resistant vent screens and tempered glazing are considerations that come up on almost every project here.
The climate at Springville's elevation is noticeably different from the valley floor below. Summer temperatures regularly climb into the 90s and above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and the UV exposure at this elevation accelerates wear on exterior caulk, paint, and roofing materials. Winter brings overnight freezes and occasional snow events, and the freeze-thaw cycle is a real cause of cracked concrete flatwork and shifting slab edges on foothill properties. Any sunroom footing poured here needs reinforcement designed for this cycle, not the standard valley-floor pour. Getting glazing, drainage, and foundation right the first time matters more in Springville because finding a contractor willing to make the 45-mile trip from Visalia for a warranty call is harder than it is anywhere in the valley.
Our crew works throughout Springville regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Permits for Springville projects go through Tulare County's Building and Land Development office rather than a city hall, and we handle the permit application, coordination, and inspection scheduling on the homeowner's behalf. The county process has its own timeline and requirements, and working with it efficiently is something you only learn from doing it repeatedly.
Springville sits along the North Fork of the Tule River, just off Highway 190 heading east toward the mountains. The road connects the town to Porterville to the west and to the Sequoia National Forest to the east. Most of the homes we work on here sit on large lots with oak trees overhead, and the properties range from in-town parcels to hillside places with long driveways and limited equipment access. We plan for both.
We serve homeowners throughout the Springville area and regularly work in nearby Porterville as well as Terra Bella. If you are outside the immediate Springville area, call us and we can confirm coverage for your address.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We serve Springville and make the drive to foothill properties - you do not need to be near the valley floor to work with us.
We schedule a site visit, look at your property, and give you a written itemized estimate before any work begins. We also discuss fire-zone material requirements, access considerations, and glazing options specific to Springville's foothill climate - so there are no surprises on cost or scope.
We file the Tulare County permit application and manage all inspection scheduling. Construction begins once the permit is approved, and we keep you informed throughout the build so you are never wondering what is happening or when.
After the final county inspection passes, we walk through the completed project with you. We explain maintenance steps for foothill conditions - including how to manage debris from nearby trees and what to watch for after heavy rain or hard freeze.
We serve Springville and the surrounding foothills. No obligation - just a clear, written estimate based on your actual property.
(559) 854-8706Springville is a small unincorporated community in Tulare County, situated in the Sierra Nevada foothills at an elevation of roughly 1,150 feet. The North Fork of the Tule River runs through town, and most residents live on properties surrounded by oak woodland and chaparral rather than the flat, agricultural landscape of the valley below. Springville has a population of roughly 1,000 to 1,500 people, and most residents are long-term homeowners with a genuine connection to the land. The housing stock is predominantly older wood-frame homes on large lots, many of which have not been significantly updated since the 1970s and 1980s.
Highway 190 runs through town and connects Springville to Porterville about 25 miles to the west and to the Sequoia National Forest to the east. The forest border and the fire terrain that comes with it make Springville a different working environment than the valley communities below. Neighboring communities include Porterville to the west, where Tulare County's main urban services are concentrated, and Terra Bella to the southwest in the valley floor's citrus belt. Both are part of our regular service area.
Enjoy your sunroom year-round with full insulation and climate control.
Learn MoreA comfortable, screened space perfect for spring, summer, and fall use.
Learn MoreKeep bugs out while letting the breeze in with quality screen rooms.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and protection year-round.
Learn MoreWe make the drive to Springville - call today and we will have a written estimate to you within one business day.