
Precision Visalia Sunrooms builds and remodels sunrooms for Selma, CA homeowners - including sunroom additions, screen rooms, and patio enclosures suited to Fresno County summers. We know the older housing stock here and reply within one business day.

Many Selma homes have older sunrooms or enclosed patios that were built with single-pane glass and minimal insulation - they work in spring but become unusable by July. Our sunroom remodeling service replaces those outdated systems with low-E glass and properly insulated framing, turning a space you avoid in summer into one you can actually use.
Selma's older ranch homes commonly have covered back patios that are pleasant in October but unbearable from June through August. Enclosing that space with screened or glass panels - and adding a ceiling fan or mini-split - extends the comfortable season by months without the cost of a full room addition.
Selma gets enough agricultural dust in the air during harvest season that a screened outdoor room makes a real difference. A screen room blocks insects and airborne debris while letting the breeze through - ideal for the shoulder months of April, May, September, and October when the weather is genuinely good.
Ranch-style homes throughout Selma often have rear yard space that sits empty most of the year because there is nowhere comfortable to gather in summer heat. A properly insulated sunroom addition creates climate-controlled bonus space that functions as a second living area, a reading room, or a place for kids to play without being outdoors.
Selma winters are mild enough that a well-insulated sunroom can stay comfortable without heavy heating - but you do need the right glass and framing to handle nights that drop near freezing during December and January. A four-season room with proper thermal performance handles those cold nights without running up the heating bill.
Vinyl framing holds up well in the Central Valley's dry heat because it does not conduct heat the way aluminum does and does not rust, rot, or need painting over time. For Selma homeowners who want a low-maintenance sunroom that stays looking clean through dusty summer months and damp winter fog, vinyl is a practical choice.
Selma sits along the Highway 99 corridor in Fresno County, where summer temperatures routinely exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit from June through September. That kind of sustained heat is not just uncomfortable - it is actively damaging to materials that were not specified for this climate. Single-pane glass transmits solar heat directly into the room, making it unlivable. Poorly sealed frames develop gaps as the framing expands and contracts with daily temperature swings. A sunroom that is not built for a Central Valley summer becomes a liability rather than a living space within a few years.
The clay-heavy soils common throughout the Selma area create a secondary challenge. The ground shrinks noticeably during the long dry summer months and swells back when winter rains return. That seasonal movement - predictable but relentless - puts stress on any concrete slab and on whatever is anchored to it. Selma homes from the 1960s and 1970s, which make up a large share of the city's housing stock, often have existing patios on slabs that have already shifted once or twice over the decades. We assess existing slab conditions before we design an enclosure so the finished structure is anchored correctly and sealed against the movement that will come.
Our crew works throughout Selma regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The older neighborhoods near downtown Selma - the blocks around High Street and the historic core - tend to have homes from the 1950s through 1970s with stucco exteriors, concrete block perimeter walls, and covered patios that were added at various points over the decades. These homes are well-built but often have add-ons that were done without permits or with materials that have not held up. We see this often and know what to look for before we start any enclosure work.
Selma is about 15 miles south of Fresno along Highway 99, which keeps us close on most mornings. We also regularly serve Sanger to the east, where we encounter the same housing ages and similar soil conditions. Permits for Selma projects go through the City of Selma's Building and Safety Division, and we handle that process for every project we build in the city.
Selma is a working-class community where homeowners expect straightforward answers. If there is a problem with an existing slab or a question about whether a permit will be needed, we tell you upfront - not after the project is underway. That is how we work, and it is why Selma homeowners tend to refer us to their neighbors.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form - we reply within one business day. We gather basic information about your project and schedule a site visit at a time that works for you.
We visit your Selma property, measure the space, check the existing slab or structure, and walk through options with you. Your written estimate itemizes every cost - there are no surprises added after you approve it.
We submit the permit application to the City of Selma and begin construction once it is approved. Most Selma jobs take one to three weeks of active construction depending on the scope.
We do a final walkthrough with you before we call the job done. You receive documentation of the completed permit inspection and know how to reach us if anything needs attention afterward.
We serve Selma and the surrounding Fresno County area. No-pressure estimates, written proposals, and responses within one business day.
(559) 409-1729Selma is a city of about 24,000 people in Fresno County, sitting roughly 15 miles south of downtown Fresno along Highway 99. The city calls itself the Raisin Capital of the World - raisin grape vineyards cover much of the surrounding farmland, and the agricultural harvest is a defining part of local life each fall. Most residents own their homes and have lived in the area for many years. The older downtown core along High Street has historic commercial buildings and homes that date to the early 1900s, and the surrounding residential neighborhoods are mostly single-story ranch houses built between the 1950s and 1990s. You can read more about Selma's history and character on the Selma, California Wikipedia page.
Newer subdivisions have been added on the north and east edges of Selma over the past two decades - larger homes with more consistent lot sizes that look noticeably different from the older in-town blocks. Both parts of the city share the same valley climate, with summers that routinely hit 105 degrees and winters that bring tule fog and occasional frost from December through February. We work throughout Selma and also serve nearby Fresno to the north for homeowners looking for the same sunroom services closer to the city.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
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Learn MoreCall today or submit an estimate request online - we reply within one business day and can schedule a Selma site visit quickly.