
Your deck already has the footprint. We add walls, a roof, and proper windows - turning a space you avoid in July into a comfortable room you will use every month of the year.

Deck-to-sunroom conversion in Santa Clarita means enclosing your existing wood deck with walls, a roof, and windows to create a fully livable indoor space - keeping the deck's foundation and floor structure in most cases. Construction typically takes three to six weeks once permits are approved, with the full timeline running three to five months including city permitting and any required HOA review.
Whether your deck is comfortable enough to build on depends less on its surface and more on its framing, posts, and footings. We inspect those structural elements before quoting any price - because the cost difference between a sound deck and one that needs reinforcement can be significant. Homeowners with a concrete slab rather than a wood deck may want to look at our patio-to-sunroom conversion service instead.
Santa Clarita's inland heat means you want more than a basic screen enclosure. A room that stays comfortable in a July heat wave - and then earns back its cost when you sell - needs proper insulation, energy-efficient glass, and a real connection to your home's cooling system.
If you walk past your deck all summer without stepping on it because the heat is unbearable, that is the clearest sign a conversion makes sense. Santa Clarita's inland heat makes an open deck genuinely uncomfortable for three to four months - a climate-controlled sunroom solves that completely.
Surface boards that look tired do not necessarily mean the deck is done. What matters is the framing underneath. If the structure is solid, a conversion can give you a brand-new room without tearing everything out - just walls and a roof over what you already have.
If your family has outgrown your home but a full addition feels like too big a project, your deck may already be the answer. Converting an existing deck is significantly less disruptive and less expensive than building a room from the ground up, and remote work has made that extra space more valuable than ever.
Santa Clarita residents near open hillsides know that wildfire smoke can make outdoor spaces unusable for days at a time during fire season. An enclosed sunroom with proper windows and ventilation gives you a buffer - natural light and a connection to the yard without breathing outdoor air when conditions are poor.
We manage your conversion end to end - structural inspection of the existing deck, design, city permits, HOA architectural review if required, full construction, and the final inspection walkthrough. If you want a room that works year-round in Santa Clarita's climate, we build four-season rooms with proper insulation and HVAC connections as a standard offering, not an upgrade. For homeowners who want the maximum in comfort and natural light, we also offer all season rooms with expanded glass options and enhanced thermal performance.
Every project starts with an honest site visit - we look at your deck's actual condition before quoting anything, and we explain exactly what repairs or reinforcements, if any, are needed before work can begin. If your deck requires structural work, we tell you upfront rather than after you have signed a contract. Those who have a concrete patio base rather than a wood deck should also ask about our patio-to-sunroom conversion option.
Inspection of framing, posts, and footings before any conversion work begins - the only way to give you an honest price.
Best for homeowners who want to extend comfortable outdoor seasons with screened or windowed walls - no HVAC connection required.
Fully insulated walls and roof, energy-efficient glass, and an HVAC connection for year-round comfort in Santa Clarita's extreme summers.
We handle every submission - city permit application, HOA architectural drawings, and the final inspection scheduling - from start to finish.
Much of Santa Clarita's housing stock was built during the rapid growth of the 1980s and 1990s, which means many decks are now 25 to 40 years old. Decks of that age were often built to outdoor-only standards - lighter framing, shallower footings, and no expectation that they would someday support a fully enclosed room. That does not mean conversion is impossible, but it does mean a real structural inspection before any quoting is non-negotiable. Homeowners in Saugus and Canyon Country often have decks in this age range, and we inspect those carefully before making any design commitments.
Santa Clarita's fire hazard designation is also a real factor. Parts of the city - particularly areas near open hillsides - are classified as high or very high fire hazard zones by the state. This affects which exterior materials can be used on your sunroom and matters to your homeowner's insurance carrier as well. We select materials that meet those requirements from the start, so you are not forced to make expensive changes during the permit review. For a fire hazard zone lookup, the California Office of the State Fire Marshal's website is the best starting point.
We respond within one business day. You describe your deck, its approximate size and age, and what you want the room for. No need to have all the answers - just a general idea of your goals gets us started.
We come to your home and inspect the deck's framing, posts, and footings - not just the surface boards. This visit typically takes 30 to 60 minutes and is the only way to give you an accurate price. You receive a written estimate within a few days.
If your neighborhood has an HOA, we prepare and submit architectural drawings for review before filing with the city. Once HOA approval is in hand, we apply for the building permit with the City of Santa Clarita. Plan for this phase to take four to ten weeks total.
With permits approved, we frame the walls and roof, install windows and doors, complete insulation and electrical, and finish the interior. A city inspector verifies the work meets safety standards before you use the room. We schedule that inspection and we are there for it.
Free on-site estimate with a structural look at your deck. Written quote. No obligation. We handle permits and HOA submissions.
(661) 592-2910We inspect the deck framing, posts, and footings before quoting anything. Many Santa Clarita decks from the 1980s and 1990s need reinforcement before conversion - and you deserve to know that before you sign a contract, not after. Our estimate reflects what your specific deck actually requires.
We specify insulation, low solar heat gain windows, and fire-rated exterior materials appropriate for this climate and fire hazard zone. A room that cannot handle a 105-degree July afternoon or that uses the wrong exterior materials in a fire-prone area is not a room worth building.
We have navigated the City of Santa Clarita permit process and HOA architectural review submissions for communities including Valencia, Stevenson Ranch, and Saugus. That experience means fewer delays and a submission that reviewers approve the first time.
Every conversion we complete is properly permitted and inspected by the city. The National Association of the Remodeling Industry consistently notes that unpermitted additions can derail a home sale. We give you the paperwork to prove the room was built correctly - so there are no surprises during escrow.
Working in Santa Clarita means understanding its older housing stock, its fire hazard zones, its HOA landscape, and its extreme summer climate - and building conversions that hold up under all of those conditions. That local knowledge is what separates a project that finishes cleanly from one that creates problems down the road.
Year-round enclosed rooms with expanded glass options and enhanced thermal performance for homeowners who want maximum light and comfort.
Learn MoreThe concrete-slab version of a conversion - if you have a ground-level patio rather than a raised deck, this is the right starting point.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Santa Clarita are real - call us now to get your project in the queue and scheduled before peak season.