
Simi Valley Sunrooms & Patios serves Newbury Park with patio enclosures, four season sunrooms, and sunroom additions built for ranch homes and hillside properties throughout the Conejo Valley. We respond to all Newbury Park inquiries within one business day and bring every project to permit close.

Newbury Park ranch homes from the 1960s and 1970s typically have an existing slab patio that is well-positioned to enclose, since the foundation work is already done. Our patio enclosure service turns that open slab into a usable, permitted room without the cost of a full ground-up addition.
The Conejo Valley gets hot summers and occasional heavy winter rain, and a four season sunroom with low-E insulated glass handles both extremes well. For homes near the Santa Monica Mountains where wildfire smoke can roll in during fire season, a fully sealed four season room keeps your indoor air clean.
Most Newbury Park homes sit on single-family lots with yard space that has not been built out, and a sunroom addition is one of the most efficient ways to convert that unused area into living space. Homes built in the 1960s through 1980s typically have straightforward roof-line geometry that makes additions cleaner to attach and permit.
If you want to use your outdoor space during the cooler months without full glass enclosure, a screen room is a cost-effective option for Newbury Park properties. The mild Conejo Valley winters mean a screen room is comfortable from October through April without heating, and it keeps insects and debris out during the dry season.
Newer planned communities in Newbury Park may have HOA guidelines that specify exterior colors, rooflines, and material types. A custom sunroom designed to those specifications passes architectural review faster and blends with the existing home rather than looking like an afterthought.
A patio cover is a practical first step for Newbury Park homeowners who want shade protection during summer without committing to a full enclosure. Aluminum patio covers hold up well in the Conejo Valley's sun and wind environment and require minimal maintenance compared to wood alternatives.
Newbury Park is part of the City of Thousand Oaks in Ventura County, and the bulk of its housing was built in a 30-year window between 1960 and 1990. That means the majority of homes in the area are now between 35 and 65 years old. Original stucco, roofing, window seals, and patio structures from that era are at or past the end of their useful life for many properties. The hot, dry Conejo Valley summers - regularly reaching the 90s from late spring through early fall - accelerate wear on any exterior material, especially caulk, painted surfaces, and glazing seals on older sunroom or patio structures.
The hillside factor matters here more than in flat Valley communities. Many Newbury Park homes, especially those closer to the Santa Monica Mountains, sit on sloped or graded lots where drainage and soil movement affect how a sunroom or patio enclosure is engineered and anchored. The area is also in a high fire hazard severity zone, and California building code has specific requirements for structures built or updated in these zones. A contractor unfamiliar with fire zone material requirements or Thousand Oaks permit process will create delays and potentially require costly redesigns mid-project.
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 Community Development Department rather than Ventura County, and we submit plans through that office regularly. The distinction matters because Thousand Oaks plan check reviewers have specific requirements for fire zone projects that differ from general county standards.
The Conejo Valley's geography shapes the work we do here. Lynn Road and Wendy Drive are the main corridors through the western part of Newbury Park, and Borchard Community Park sits near the geographic center of the neighborhood. Many of the older subdivisions closer to the foothills have lots with more grade change than the flatter tracts near the 101 freeway, and we plan accordingly. The Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area borders the community to the south, and homes that back up to open space need ember-resistant venting and appropriate material choices under California fire zone building rules.
We serve Camarillo to the northwest and Thousand Oaks broadly, so we are in this part of Ventura County regularly and can schedule Newbury Park visits without long wait times.
Call or submit the contact form and we will respond within one business day. Let us know if your home is in a fire hazard severity zone or an HOA community so we can bring the right reference materials to the assessment visit.
We visit your property, measure the space, review lot conditions and fire zone classification, and provide a written estimate covering all costs. If your lot has a slope that requires extra foundation work, we include that in the estimate rather than surfacing it later as a change order.
We prepare and submit all permit documents to the City of Thousand Oaks on your behalf. Thousand Oaks plan check typically runs two to four weeks for a patio enclosure or sunroom addition. You do not need to make any trips to the building department.
Construction on most Newbury Park patio enclosures runs two to four weeks, with larger sunroom additions taking four to eight weeks. We schedule the city final inspection and do a walkthrough with you before we close out. The job is not done until the permit is finaled and you are satisfied.
We serve Newbury Park and the Conejo Valley. Written estimate, no obligation, response within one business day.
(805) 261-5995Newbury Park is a community within the City of Thousand Oaks in Ventura County, situated at the western edge of the Conejo Valley where the suburbs give way to the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area. The neighborhood grew rapidly as a suburb during the 1960s through 1980s, and that housing stock of single-story and two-story ranch homes on modest to medium-sized lots still makes up the core of the community. Borchard Community Park serves as a central gathering point, and the open hillsides visible from much of the area remind residents of the wildland proximity that shapes life here.
Alongside the older subdivisions, Newbury Park includes newer planned communities developed in the 1990s and 2000s, some with HOA-managed common spaces and architectural standards that apply to exterior work. Homeownership rates in Thousand Oaks are well above the California average, and residents here tend to invest in their properties for the long term. Nearby Thousand Oaks and Moorpark to the north share similar Conejo Valley housing conditions and are also areas we serve on a regular basis.
Add beautiful, permanent living space to your home with a custom sunroom.
Learn MoreExpert construction services delivering durable, code-compliant sunrooms.
Learn MoreKeep insects out while enjoying fresh air in a screened outdoor room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed, year-round sunroom.
Learn MoreTurn your deck into a comfortable, weather-protected sunroom addition.
Learn MoreEnclose your patio to create a private, protected outdoor living area.
Learn MoreGlass-roof solariums that fill your home with natural light year-round.
Learn MoreShade your outdoor area with a durable, professionally installed patio cover.
Learn MoreWe know Newbury Park homes, Conejo Valley permits, and the fire zone requirements that apply here. Call now and we will get back to you within one business day.