
Your patio slab is already there. We build the walls, roof, and windows around it - turning wasted outdoor space into a comfortable room you can use every day of the year.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Santa Clarita means building a fully enclosed, livable room on top of your existing concrete patio slab - adding walls, a roof, windows, and climate control so you can use the space year-round. Most projects take eight to fourteen weeks from contract to final inspection, with two to six of those weeks spent in the permit review phase.
If you have a solid patio slab sitting underused in your backyard, you are already partway to a new room. We assess the slab, handle the City of Santa Clarita permit process, and build an enclosure that feels like it was always part of your home. Many homeowners also explore a deck-to-sunroom conversion if they have a wood deck rather than a slab.
In Santa Clarita's climate, the goal is a room that stays comfortable during 100-plus-degree summers and mild winters alike. That means energy-efficient windows, proper insulation, and a connection to your home's HVAC - not a basic screen enclosure that becomes an oven by July.
If you walk past your patio from June through September without ever sitting on it, that is a strong signal. Santa Clarita summers are genuinely punishing - an open slab offers no relief from triple-digit heat. A properly built sunroom with climate control changes that completely.
If your backyard already has a concrete patio in decent shape, you are partway to a sunroom. The slab is the foundation - and if it is structurally sound, your contractor builds directly on top of it, which keeps costs lower than starting from scratch.
If your family has outgrown your living room, you need a home office, or you want a dedicated space for hobbies - a sunroom solves that without the cost of a full addition. Converting an existing patio is often the most practical way to add a room in an established Santa Clarita neighborhood.
If your existing pergola or patio cover is rotting or sagging, that is a natural moment to upgrade to a full sunroom rather than just replace the cover. The cost difference between a new patio cover and a proper enclosed room is often smaller than homeowners expect.
We handle every part of your conversion - from the first site visit to the final city inspection. That includes assessing your existing slab, designing the enclosure to match your home, pulling the building permit, and completing the full construction. For homeowners who want a fully climate-controlled space, we also offer enclosed patio rooms with insulated walls and HVAC connections built in from the start.
Not sure whether a three-season or four-season room fits your budget and goals? We walk you through the difference during the estimate visit - no pressure, just a clear explanation of what each option actually costs and what you get in return. If you are working with a wood deck instead of a concrete slab, ask us about our deck-to-sunroom conversion service as well.
Suits homeowners who want to extend the outdoor season with a screened or windowed room that is comfortable in spring, fall, and mild winter days.
The right choice for Santa Clarita homeowners who want year-round use - fully insulated walls, energy-efficient glass, and a connection to your existing HVAC.
For patios with cracks, settling, or uneven surfaces, we evaluate and reinforce the foundation before any walls go up.
We prepare plans, submit to the city, coordinate HOA architectural review if needed, and schedule the final inspection - you do not have to chase paperwork.
Santa Clarita sits in an inland valley where summer temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees F - sometimes pushing past 110 during heat waves. That means any sunroom built here needs to be designed specifically for that heat load. A contractor who builds the same way they would in a coastal market will leave you with a room that becomes an oven by mid-June. We specify windows with low solar heat gain ratings and insulation details that keep the room comfortable even on the hottest days - because that is what this climate actually requires. Homeowners in Valencia and Saugus face these same conditions, and we have worked in both communities.
California's energy efficiency requirements for new construction also apply to enclosed additions like sunrooms. When your room is connected to heating and cooling, the windows, insulation, and sometimes roofing materials must meet state performance standards - and this is verified during the permit inspection. We build every conversion to pass that inspection the first time. If your home is on a hillside lot or in an area with clay-heavy soils - common in parts of Canyon Country and Saugus - we also pay close attention to the existing slab's condition before we ever begin framing walls.
We respond within one business day. The first conversation is a short call where you describe your patio, share rough dimensions, and tell us how you plan to use the room - no need to have everything figured out beforehand.
We come to your home, inspect the existing slab for cracks or settling, measure the space, and walk through your design options. You receive a written estimate within a few days that breaks down exactly what is included.
Once you approve the design and sign the contract, we submit the permit application to the City of Santa Clarita and handle any HOA architectural review if your neighborhood requires it. This phase takes two to six weeks - we keep you updated throughout.
With permits in hand, we prepare the slab, frame the walls and roof, install windows and doors, and finish the interior. A city inspector signs off before handover. You get a room that is fully permitted and ready to use.
Free on-site estimate. Written quote. No obligation. We handle permits and HOA submissions so you do not have to.
(661) 592-2910We specify windows with low solar heat gain ratings and proper insulation details for an inland high-heat climate. A sunroom that cannot handle a 105-degree July afternoon is not worth building. We have seen what happens when those details get skipped, and we do not skip them.
We prepare the plans, submit to the City of Santa Clarita's Building and Safety Division, and schedule the final inspection. You do not have to track down paperwork or follow up with the permit office. When the inspector shows up, we are there.
A large share of Santa Clarita neighborhoods - including Valencia, Stevenson Ranch, and Saugus - are HOA-governed. We have prepared and submitted architectural review packages in these communities and know what reviewers look for. That experience keeps your project from being delayed by a rejected submission.
Every project we take on is covered by a current California contractor license, which you can verify on the California Contractors State License Board website. A licensed contractor carries the required insurance and can be held accountable if anything goes wrong.
Local experience in Santa Clarita means knowing the permit office, the HOA review processes, the soil conditions, and the climate demands that shape every patio-to-sunroom conversion here. That knowledge shows up in a project that finishes on time and passes inspection the first time around.
Convert an existing wood deck into a fully enclosed room - a great option when you have a raised deck rather than a ground-level concrete slab.
Learn MoreFully enclosed, insulated rooms built on patio footprints with dedicated heating, cooling, and finished interiors for everyday living.
Learn MorePermit season fills up fast in Santa Clarita - call us today to get your project on the schedule before the next wait.