
Superior Perris Fence & Deck provides covered patio cover installation, custom deck construction, pergola building, and fencing throughout Riverside, CA. We have worked on homes across Riverside's diverse neighborhoods since 2019, from craftsman bungalows near downtown to newer subdivisions in Orangecrest and La Sierra - and we understand how the city's clay soils and triple-digit summers affect outdoor structures. We reply within one business day.
Riverside's summers average around 287 sunny days per year, with highs that regularly exceed 100 degrees from June through September - making an uncovered backyard nearly unusable for months at a time. Our covered decks and patio covers service creates shaded outdoor living space that works year-round, whether you choose a solid insulated panel, a wood lattice, or a full structural cover with lighting.
Riverside's housing stock spans more than a century - from early 1900s Craftsman bungalows in the Wood Streets neighborhood to postwar ranch homes and 1990s two-story stucco subdivisions. Each era and style calls for a different approach, and a custom design accounts for the home's actual setbacks, foundation type, and framing rather than fitting a standard plan to a lot it was not built for.
Many Riverside homeowners want shade without a fully enclosed patio cover. A pergola gives you filtered light and a defined outdoor room without blocking the mountain views that are one of the reasons many people chose the Inland Empire. We size footings to stay below Riverside's active clay soil layer so the structure stays level as the ground moves with the seasons.
A significant share of Riverside's housing was built before 1980, and original decks from that era are now well past their expected lifespan. We assess the full structure - not just the visible surface - because clay soil movement in Riverside often shifts post bases and ledger connections without obvious surface damage, leaving a deck that looks passable but is no longer structurally sound.
Riverside's UV index is consistently high, and bare wood surfaces on south- or west-facing decks will gray and crack within a few seasons without regular maintenance. Composite boards resist UV degradation and do not require annual sanding and staining, which makes them a practical choice for Riverside homeowners who want low-maintenance outdoor space.
Riverside's Santa Ana wind events, which roll through each fall, can buckle or topple wood fencing with weakened posts. Vinyl fence panels are more resistant to the torque those gusts create, and they do not absorb moisture from the rare but real winter rain events that rot wood posts over time in clay-heavy soil.
Riverside is the county seat of Riverside County and one of the larger cities in Southern California's Inland Empire, with a population around 320,000 and a housing stock that spans more than a century. Homes near downtown and in the Wood Streets neighborhood date to the early 1900s and feature original Craftsman and Spanish Colonial Revival construction - clay tile roofs, original wood trim, and covered front porches that require materials matched to the era. The mid-century ranch homes built through the 1950s and 1970s sit on concrete slab foundations, and those slabs have been through decades of clay soil movement, seasonal heat, and the occasional frost that pushes past overnight low temperatures in the upper 20s during December and January. Newer subdivisions in Orangecrest and La Sierra, built in the 1980s through 2000s, present a different set of conditions: two-story stucco construction with tile roofs and smaller backyards that need smart use of available square footage.
Any outdoor structure in Riverside operates under a genuine climate challenge. Summer highs exceed 100 degrees regularly, UV exposure is relentless, and Santa Ana wind events each fall can gust above 50 mph. The City of Riverside Building and Safety Department manages permits for all residential construction, and attached patio covers, new decks, and structural changes require plan check before work begins. Projects on historic properties in designated neighborhoods may also require review by the city's Historic Preservation Office to ensure new construction matches original materials. Knowing which properties fall under those requirements - and what the permit office typically flags - is a practical advantage that contractors who work Riverside regularly bring to every project.
Our crew works throughout Riverside regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect deck builder work here. Riverside's permit process runs through the City of Riverside Building and Safety Department, and we are familiar with their plan check requirements for patio covers, attached decks, and freestanding structures. Knowing what documentation to submit - and how to address common plan check comments before they become delays - keeps projects on schedule.
Riverside is defined geographically by the 91 Freeway along its northern edge, the 215 running south toward Perris, and the 60 cutting across the middle of the city toward Moreno Valley. Mission Inn Avenue anchors downtown, and the University of California, Riverside campus is a widely known reference point for the university district neighborhoods to the east. Mount Rubidoux to the west is visible from a large swath of the city and serves as a navigational landmark locals use without thinking about it. Whether a project is in the Wood Streets near downtown or out in a newer neighborhood near the city's edge, we know the terrain.
We regularly serve Jurupa Valley to the west, where large lots and older housing stock create a different set of outdoor construction needs, and we handle projects in Moreno Valley to the east, where the pace of new construction and the prevalence of tract homes shapes what most homeowners are working with.
Call or fill out the form online. We reply within one business day. Let us know whether you need a new patio cover, a deck build or repair, a pergola, or fencing - and whether the home is in a historic district, so we can account for any additional review requirements upfront.
We come to the property, measure the space, and review the existing structure if there is one. The estimate is written and itemized, covering materials, labor, and permit fees. If the project involves historic review or HOA approval, we note what documentation you will need at this visit so there are no surprises later.
We file the permit application with the City of Riverside Building and Safety Department and handle follow-up on plan check comments. Construction is scheduled once the permit is approved. We give you a realistic timeline that accounts for the city's current review workload - not an optimistic guess.
Work is done by our own crew, not subcontracted out. We schedule the required inspections with the city and walk you through the finished project before we leave. Any punch list items are handled before the job is closed.
We serve all of Riverside, CA - from downtown neighborhoods to Orangecrest and La Sierra. Free estimates, no pressure. Reply within one business day.
(951) 564-0477Riverside is the county seat of Riverside County and one of the defining cities of Southern California's Inland Empire region. Founded in the 1870s during the citrus industry boom, the city grew steadily through the early 1900s and is home to some of the most architecturally distinctive residential neighborhoods in the region. The Wood Streets area near downtown is known for its early 20th-century Craftsman bungalows, and the broader downtown corridor features the iconic Mission Inn Hotel and Spa, a Spanish Mission Revival landmark that has defined Riverside's civic identity for over a century. The city's housing stock reflects every decade of its growth, from those pre-1940 historic homes to postwar ranch subdivisions to the large two-story tract homes built in the 1990s and 2000s in neighborhoods like Orangecrest and La Sierra.
Today Riverside has roughly 320,000 residents, and about 54 percent of homes are owner-occupied. The University of California, Riverside anchors the eastern part of the city and is one of the largest employers in the region, drawing a stable, long-term homeowning population to the surrounding neighborhoods. Interstate 91, the 215, and the 60 connect Riverside to the broader Inland Empire and to Los Angeles and Orange County. Nearby cities include Moreno Valley to the east and Jurupa Valley to the west - both part of the same service area where we work regularly.
We design and build custom decks tailored to your yard and lifestyle.
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Learn MoreRestore your existing deck or replace it with a fresh new structure.
Learn MoreProtect and refresh your deck with professional staining and sealing.
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Learn MoreCall or submit the form today. We serve all of Riverside and reply within one business day - no pressure, no obligation.