
Generic kits never fit right. We design your sunroom around your home, your yard, and how you actually plan to use the space - then we build it to last.

Custom sunrooms in Garden Grove are glass-enclosed rooms designed specifically around your home, yard, and how you plan to use the space - most projects run from ten to sixteen weeks start to finish, with two to four weeks of active construction once permits are approved.
Unlike a prefabricated kit, a custom build accounts for your roofline, exterior materials, and the direction your home faces - all of which matter a lot in Garden Grove where intense afternoon sun can make the wrong room uncomfortable to use. If you have been comparing options, our sunroom construction page covers the full process and timeline in more detail.
Many Garden Grove homeowners come to us after looking at a kit and realizing the proportions are wrong, the roof style clashes, or the glass is not suited for Southern California heat. A custom design solves all of that before a single piece of material is ordered.
If your patio furniture sits unused most of the year because the afternoon sun is too intense or insects make evenings miserable, your outdoor space is not working for you. Garden Grove's climate means a properly designed sunroom could be usable nearly every day - the backyard view without the glare, bugs, or wind.
If your family has outgrown the layout but a full room addition seems overwhelming in cost and disruption, a custom sunroom is often the practical middle ground. It adds real, comfortable square footage - a second living room, a dedicated dining space, or a home office - without the complexity of an interior renovation.
Garden Grove's west and southwest-facing exposures can make existing patios and interior rooms near large windows uncomfortable for hours each day. If you are closing blinds by 2 p.m., a custom sunroom with the right low-heat glass can solve the problem rather than make it worse - that is a design decision a kit cannot make for you.
If the cover over your existing patio is sagging, leaking, or just worn out, that is often the moment homeowners decide to do something more permanent. The cost difference between replacing a tired patio cover and upgrading to a sunroom that will last decades is often smaller than most people expect.
Every custom sunroom project starts with a design consultation at your home. We look at your existing structure, measure the available space, discuss how you plan to use the room, and talk through glass options that make sense for your specific exposure. From there, we handle everything - permit drawings, city submissions, and the build itself. If you are still figuring out what style fits your home, our sunroom design service is a good starting point before committing to a full build.
We build a range of custom room types depending on your goals and budget. Homeowners who want year-round use and climate control choose our fully insulated, four-season designs. Those who want a lighter investment for the nine mild months Garden Grove reliably delivers often go with a three-season build. For the most light-focused experience, a glass-roof solarium design is also an option. Whatever the direction, the process is the same - custom to your home from the first measurement.
Best for homeowners who want climate control and year-round daily use.
Best for homeowners who want a light, airy space for Garden Grove's nine mild months.
Best for homeowners prioritizing maximum natural light and a greenhouse or plant-room feel.
Garden Grove gets over 280 sunny days a year, which means a sunroom here can be a genuine everyday living space - not just a seasonal bonus room. But that same abundant sun creates real design challenges. A room facing west or southwest without the right glass will be too hot to use by early afternoon in summer, which is exactly what happens when a generic kit is dropped onto a Garden Grove home without accounting for orientation and solar heat gain. A custom design addresses this from the first conversation, not as an afterthought.
Most Garden Grove homes were built between the 1950s and the 1970s, and older homes sometimes have structural quirks - foundation irregularities, undersized framing - that only show up when a contractor starts measuring. That is why a thorough on-site assessment before any permit is filed matters here more than in a newer suburb. We serve homeowners across the city, including Orange and Anaheim, where similar housing stock and sun conditions apply. Learn more about the California Energy Commission guidelines on glass performance that local contractors should be following.
We reply within one business day. We will ask a few basic questions about your space, how you plan to use the room, and whether you have an HOA - this shapes the estimate before anyone drives to your house.
We visit your home to measure, check your existing foundation and exterior walls, and walk through design options. This takes about an hour and is the right time to mention any HOA requirements - there is no cost and no obligation.
We prepare the drawings and handle the City of Garden Grove permit application on your behalf. If you have an HOA, we put together the architectural review submission too. Permit review typically takes a few weeks.
Once permits are in hand, active construction typically runs two to four weeks. City inspectors visit at the foundation stage and at completion. We finish with a full walkthrough covering how everything operates and what your warranty covers.
No pressure, no sales pitch. Just a straight conversation about what is possible for your home and your budget.
(657) 722-4016We file every permit with the City of Garden Grove and coordinate every required inspection - you never have to call the building department yourself. A finished room with a clean permit record protects your home's value when it matters most.
We know how to put together submissions that Garden Grove and Orange County HOA architectural review boards accept - the right drawings, the right materials descriptions, the right language. That means fewer revision cycles and a timeline that stays on track.
We specify glass with a low solar heat gain coefficient for west- and southwest-facing rooms, a critical detail in a market that gets intense afternoon sun year-round. Getting this wrong means a room you avoid in summer; getting it right means a room you use every day. The{" "}National Association of Home Builders{" "}recognizes glass selection as a primary comfort factor in sunroom construction.
Many Garden Grove homes from the 1950s through 1970s have structural quirks that only appear when a contractor looks carefully. We do a detailed foundation and wall check before submitting a single drawing, so surprises stay off the job site and out of your budget.
Every one of these proof points comes from working on real Garden Grove homes, not a sales sheet. When you call us, you get a contractor who already knows the permit office, the HOA landscape, and the sun angles in your neighborhood.
See the full construction process, timeline, and what to expect on your property from day one.
Learn MoreWork through design choices - size, roofline, glass, and layout - before committing to a full build.
Learn MoreOur calendar fills up in spring - reach out now and we will get your project on the schedule before the busy season.