Room Addition Framing Contractor in Cameron Park, CA
Structurally precise framing for room additions, second-story expansions, bump-outs, and master suite extensions tied cleanly into your existing Cameron Park home.
What Is Addition Framing
Why Is It the Most Demanding Type of Residential Framing
Addition Framing Services We Provide in Cameron Park
Single-Story Room Additions
A single-story room addition extends the footprint of your home at the ground level adding a bedroom, family room, home office, or expanded living area. We frame the complete addition shell: floor system tied to the existing floor elevation, bearing walls and shear walls per the structural plans, partition walls for interior layout, and roof framing integrated with the existing roof geometry. We execute the tie-in at all three connection points floor, wall, and roof with the precision required to produce a seamless transition between existing and new.
Second-Story Additions
Adding a second story to a single-story Cameron Park home is a major structural undertaking that requires assessment of the entire existing first-floor structure. The existing first-floor walls must be verified as adequate to carry the new load from above and upgraded where they are not. The existing foundation must be evaluated for the additional weight. New second-floor joists, bearing walls, shear walls, and roof framing must be sized and connected to carry every load path cleanly from the new roof to the existing foundation. We perform or coordinate the structural engineering assessment, execute the framing under the approved permit, and manage the temporary roof removal and weather protection sequence during construction.
Kitchen and Great Room Bump-Outs
A bump-out extends an existing room, typically a kitchen, dining room, or living room by three to eight feet to create additional usable space without the cost and complexity of a full room addition. The framing scope of a bump-out is smaller than a full addition, but the structural tie-in is proportionally more complex because the existing roof, floor, and walls must be opened, extended, and reframed within a tight footprint. We frame bump-outs with the same structural rigor as full additions, proper headers at the new opening, floor system extension matched to the existing joist elevation, and roof framing that integrates with the existing roofline without creating drainage problems.
Master Suite Additions
A master suite addition combines bedroom space, bathroom space, and often a walk-in closet into a single addition that extends from an existing bedroom or hallway. The framing scope includes bearing walls and partitions for room layout, headers for closet and bathroom doorways, floor system framing sized for the point loads from fixtures (bathtub, shower, toilet, vanity) and the water weight they contain, ceiling framing that accommodates exhaust ducting, and roof framing that ties into the existing roof at the correct pitch and drainage plane. We coordinate the framing plan with the plumber and HVAC contractor to ensure that joist spacing, blocking, and ceiling depth accommodate the mechanical systems before the structure is closed in.
Sunroom and Enclosed Patio Additions
Converting an existing open patio or deck into an enclosed sunroom or all-season room requires framing that is structurally independent of the existing patio structure because patio framing is not designed to carry the loads of a habitable room. We frame sunroom additions with a new foundation, a new floor system, bearing walls sized for the roof and window loads, and a roof structure that ties into the existing house at the wall-to-roof connection. The extensive window and glass door openings typical of sunroom designs require carefully sized headers and king/jack stud assemblies to carry the roof load across wide spans without visual deflection.
Addition Framing Corrections and Structural Upgrades
When an additional project, whether new or from a previous owner's work, reveals framing deficiencies at the tie-in point, we correct them. Common findings include: existing rim joists that are rotted at the connection point, existing headers that are undersized for the modified load path, roof tie-ins that create valleys without proper valley rafter support, and shear wall requirements that were not addressed when the original addition was built. We document every correction and submit the scope to the building department for permit and inspection.
Why Cameron Park Homeowners Choose DC Custom for Addition Framing
We Assess the Existing Structure Before the Addition Is Designed
01
Floor Elevation Matching Is Solved Before Concrete Is Poured
02
Roof Tie-In Framing That Drains, Aligns, and Carries Load
03
Structural Tie-In to Older Cameron Park Homes
04
Every Addition We Frame Is Permitted, Inspected, and Documented
05
Our Process
How Our Cameron Park Addition Framing Projects Work
01
Existing Structure Assessment
Before the addition plans are finalized, we assess the existing home at every proposed connection point. We measure existing floor elevations, inspect the existing framing through the crawl space or attic, verify the existing roof pitch and ridge height, and identify any conditions deteriorated framing, undersized members, previous unpermitted modifications that the addition design must accommodate. We provide this information to your architect or designer so the plans reflect the actual existing conditions, not assumptions.
02
Addition Plan Review and Structural Coordination
After the plans are drawn, we review the architectural and structural addition plans completely. We identify every bearing wall, shear wall, header, and hold-down location. We verify the floor elevation calculation against our existing-condition measurements. We confirm that the roof tie-in geometry matches the actual existing roof. We flag any discrepancy between the plans and the existing conditions before the permit is submitted.
03
Permit Application with El Dorado County
We prepare and submit the addition building permit application to El Dorado County Building Services with the required plan set, structural calculations, energy compliance documentation, and WUI compliance details where applicable. We track plan check status and respond to corrections. We coordinate with the structural engineer on any plan check revisions.
04
Addition Framing Execution
We open the existing wall, floor, and roof at the connection points. We repair or upgrade any deteriorated existing framing at the tie-in locations. We frame the new addition in sequence: floor platform matched to the existing elevation, bearing walls and shear walls per the structural plans, interior partitions, and roof framing with the tie-in to the existing roof geometry. We install all Simpson Strong-Tie connection hardware, shear wall nailing, and hold-down hardware per the structural engineer's specifications. For WUI projects, we frame the addition's exterior wall, eave, and soffit assemblies to the required fire-hardening details.
05
Framing Inspection and Documentation
We schedule and attend the El Dorado County framing inspection. The inspector will check every structural connection, the floor tie-in, the wall tie-in, the roof tie-in, shear wall nailing, hold-down installation, and WUI assembly details. After the inspection passes, you receive the complete project documentation before insulation and drywall close in the structure.