
Premier Santa Rosa Sunrooms & Patios designs and builds sunrooms, patio covers, custom additions, and all season rooms for Healdsburg homeowners. We have served Sonoma County since 2017 and handle all permitting with the City of Healdsburg Building Division, including for historic district properties near the Plaza.

Victorian and Craftsman homes near the Healdsburg Plaza require a design approach that matches existing rooflines and trim details rather than clashing with them. Our sunroom design process starts with detailed drawings so you can see exactly how the new addition will look against your existing structure before any permits are filed.
Healdsburg properties range from century-old downtown cottages to newer hillside homes with dramatic views toward Dry Creek Valley. A custom sunroom designed specifically for your property captures those views and fits the existing footprint, rather than relying on a standard kit that ignores what makes your lot unique.
Healdsburg summers are long and hot, with backyard patios baking under direct sun from June through September. A solid insulated patio cover with gutters shades the space in summer and channels the heavy winter rain events away from the foundation and patio surface.
Healdsburg homeowners who want a room they can use for outdoor dining, wine tastings, or weekend gatherings in every month of the year need insulation and climate control built in from the start. An all season room handles the 35 to 40 inches of annual rainfall and the 90-degree summer afternoons without making the space uncomfortable.
Many Healdsburg properties on the hillsides and in newer subdivisions already have covered patios attached to the back of the house. Enclosing that structure is a faster and less expensive path to an indoor-outdoor room than building from scratch, and it uses the existing roof and posts as the starting point.
Wildfire smoke from the Kincade Fire and other Sonoma County incidents has made outdoor air quality a real concern for Healdsburg residents in late summer and fall. A screened enclosure gives you ventilated outdoor space while reducing smoke and ash infiltration during the weeks when air quality is poor.
Healdsburg has two very different kinds of housing stock, and they require different approaches. Homes near the downtown plaza were built as far back as the late 1800s and early 1900s. Wood-framed Victorian and Craftsman houses in this area often have aging foundations, wood siding that has been repainted many times, and covered porches with original structural members. Attaching a sunroom to a house this old requires a careful assessment of the existing framing and foundation before any new load is applied. Skipping that step is how water intrusion and structural problems start, and they tend to stay hidden for a year or two before causing visible damage.
Homes on the hillsides outside of downtown were mostly built in the 1980s through 2000s and sit on sloped lots with clay-heavy soils. Clay soils in Sonoma County expand when wet and shrink during the dry season, which puts ongoing stress on concrete slabs, retaining walls, and any structure attached to the ground. Hillside properties also need drainage designed into patio covers and sunrooms so that winter rain - Healdsburg averages 35 to 40 inches per year - does not accumulate against the foundation. The City of Healdsburg requires permits for both types of properties, and we prepare the drawings and structural calculations that meet current California code for each site condition.
Our crew works throughout Healdsburg regularly, pulling permits with the City of Healdsburg Building Division for sunroom and patio cover projects across all parts of town - from the historic neighborhoods near the central Plaza to the newer hillside subdivisions north and east of downtown. We are familiar with both the older wood-frame construction that dominates the downtown core and the stucco-clad homes on the outskirts.
Healdsburg is a small city centered on its tree-lined Plaza, with Healdsburg Avenue running north-south through the middle of town and connecting the downtown district to the surrounding residential neighborhoods. The Russian River runs along the western edge of town, and Dry Creek Valley stretches west from the city limits into the wine country corridor. Properties near the river are in a flood zone that requires additional documentation for permitted work - something we factor into project planning from the start.
To the north, Cloverdale is the next city up Highway 101 and part of our regular service area. To the south, Windsor is a short drive down the freeway and we work across the entire Highway 101 corridor between Windsor and Healdsburg on a consistent basis.
Reach out by phone or through the online form and we will respond within one business day to schedule a site visit at your Healdsburg property. No commitment is required at that stage.
We visit the property, assess the existing structure, and walk through design options that fit your home and your budget. For older homes near the Plaza, we check foundation and framing condition during this visit. You receive a written estimate before any work begins.
We prepare the drawings, structural calculations, and energy compliance documentation and submit them to the City of Healdsburg Building Division. You do not need to visit the permit office or track status - we handle that.
Once the permit is approved, construction begins. Most Healdsburg projects are complete within five to eight weeks. We do a final walkthrough with you before calling the job done, and we schedule all required city inspections so the permit closes correctly.
We serve all of Healdsburg - from the historic Plaza neighborhoods to the hillside homes near Dry Creek Valley. Call for a free estimate or submit the form and we will respond within one business day.
(707) 867-4244Healdsburg is a small city of about 12,000 residents in northern Sonoma County, situated at the intersection of three major wine appellations: Dry Creek Valley, Alexander Valley, and Russian River Valley. The city is centered on Healdsburg Plaza, a tree-lined square surrounded by restaurants, wine tasting rooms, and locally owned shops. The downtown core has a walkable, small-town character that draws both full-time residents and wine country visitors throughout the year. Home values in Healdsburg are well above Sonoma County averages, and a notable share of the housing stock is used as vacation rentals or second properties.
The residential neighborhoods closest to the Plaza include homes built in the late 1800s and early 1900s, many with Victorian or Craftsman architectural details. Further from the center, hillside subdivisions developed in the 1980s through 2000s offer newer stucco homes on sloped lots with views toward the vineyards. The Russian River runs along the city's western boundary - a recreational asset for residents and a seasonal flood consideration for homeowners in the low-lying areas near the water. Neighboring Cloverdale lies to the north along Highway 101, and Windsor is a short drive south.
Expert construction delivering durable, high-quality sunroom structures.
Learn MoreKeep insects out while enjoying fresh air in a screened enclosure.
Learn MoreConvert your open patio into a fully enclosed sunroom addition.
Learn MoreTurn your existing deck into a comfortable enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreEnclose your patio to create a private, sheltered outdoor living area.
Learn MoreMaximize natural light with a glass-ceiling solarium room installation.
Learn MoreOur schedule fills quickly in spring and early summer. Call or submit the online form now to hold your spot for this season.