
Stop avoiding your backyard. We build screened and glass-panel sunrooms that keep bugs, heat, and wind out - so you can actually enjoy Garden Grove's great weather year-round.
Stop avoiding your backyard. We build screened and glass-panel sunrooms that keep bugs, heat, and wind out - so you can actually enjoy Garden Grove's great weather year-round.

Three season sunrooms in Garden Grove are enclosed additions using screened or single-pane glass panels on a lightweight frame, giving you a protected outdoor room for spring, summer, and fall use - and in this mild climate, most projects end up comfortable nearly every month of the year.
Unlike a fully insulated four season sunroom, a three season room is lighter in construction and typically more affordable - which makes it a practical choice for homeowners who want more usable outdoor space without the cost of a full climate-controlled addition. Garden Grove's winters are mild enough that the distinction matters less here than it would in colder states.
Most Garden Grove homes were built between the 1950s and 1980s and have concrete patio slabs that can serve as a ready foundation. The construction process runs one to three weeks once permits are approved, and we handle all city paperwork through the Garden Grove Building Division. For homes in HOA-governed neighborhoods, we also manage the association submission so you are not navigating two separate approval processes on your own.
If your patio furniture sits empty because the afternoon sun is too intense, the coastal wind is too strong, or the bugs are persistent enough to drive you inside, your outdoor space is not working. In Garden Grove, where the weather is genuinely good for most of the year, that is a fixable problem. A three season sunroom solves all three issues at once.
Many Garden Grove homes built in the 1960s and 1970s have original aluminum patio covers that are now rusting, sagging, or pulling away from the wall. If your cover is past its useful life, replacing it with a proper three season sunroom is often a smarter investment than patching an old structure. You end up with something more functional and more durable.
If your living room feels cramped and a full home addition is not in the budget, a three season sunroom adds a comfortable room for a fraction of what tearing into your existing floor plan would cost. You do not move walls or touch your plumbing. The room becomes a natural extension of your home - a place to read, eat, or relax.
Orange County's warm climate extends the season for mosquitoes, gnats, and airborne allergens from local plants and grasses. If you find yourself retreating indoors because of insects or allergy symptoms every time you try to sit outside, a screened sunroom gives you a protected space where you can breathe comfortably and still feel like you are outdoors.
The right three season sunroom depends on how you plan to use it, what your existing patio looks like, and how much of the year you want to be comfortable in the space. For homeowners who want screened protection with natural airflow, we build fully screened rooms with UV-resistant mesh - keeping bugs and direct sun out while letting the breeze in. If you want glass panels for a more enclosed feel, we offer single-pane and tempered glass options that still allow ventilation when opened. Homeowners who want full climate control year-round should look at our patio enclosures and screen room installation pages for comparison.
We work with both prefabricated systems and fully custom builds. In either case, we pull the permit with the City of Garden Grove, assess your existing slab, and schedule all required inspections. If your HOA needs design documents, we prepare and submit those as well. You deal with one contractor, not a chain of subcontractors.
Suits homeowners who want maximum airflow and bug protection, with UV-resistant mesh panels that hold up well in Garden Grove's sustained sun.
Suits homeowners who want a more enclosed feel with operable panels that open for ventilation and close when the weather turns.
Suits homeowners who want a defined budget and a faster build using engineered components that are designed to go up in one to two weeks.
Suits homeowners who have a specific size, roofline, or layout that a prefabricated kit cannot match, with materials chosen for long-term performance in Southern California.
Garden Grove sits in the heart of Orange County, where winter lows rarely drop below the mid-40s and coastal breezes temper the summer heat. This climate is unusually well-suited to a three season sunroom. In colder states, a room that is not insulated for winter might be comfortable for four or five months. Here, a well-built three season room stays usable for ten or eleven months out of the year - which changes the value calculation entirely. Homeowners from Westminster to Stanton consistently tell us they use their sunrooms more than any other room in the house.
There are also material considerations specific to this area. Garden Grove receives intense UV exposure for most of the year, and that sun is harder on certain sunroom materials than most homeowners expect. Vinyl frames and standard screen fabrics that would last decades in Seattle can fade, warp, or degrade noticeably within a few years here if they are not UV-rated. Contractors who work regularly in Orange County know which materials hold up under sustained Southern California sun - and which ones look fine at installation but start declining after the first summer. The National Fenestration Rating Council provides independent ratings for glazing performance that are worth asking your contractor about. HOA prevalence in Garden Grove neighborhoods also means design approval from your association may be required before you can even submit for a city permit - something to factor into your timeline from the start.
We respond within one business day. We will ask a few quick questions about your patio and how you plan to use the space, then schedule a free on-site visit at a time that works for you.
We visit your home, assess your existing slab condition, and walk through your options in plain terms. You will receive a written, itemized estimate - including any slab work your patio may need - before you commit to anything.
We submit the permit application to the City of Garden Grove and, if your neighborhood has an HOA, prepare and submit the design documents for association review. Permit review typically takes two to four weeks - we keep you updated throughout.
Once permits are in hand, construction typically takes one to three weeks. City inspectors visit at required stages - we schedule those appointments for you. When the room is complete, we walk through it with you, show you how everything operates, and hand you the permit paperwork.
Free on-site estimate. Written price before any work starts. No pressure, no obligation.
(657) 722-4016We submit the building permit with the City of Garden Grove as a standard part of every project - not as an optional add-on. A permitted sunroom is a documented, legal part of your home, and that matters when you sell or refinance. Unpermitted additions are one of the most common deal-killers in Orange County real estate transactions.
We specifically select frame finishes, screen materials, and glazing products that are rated for sustained UV exposure - not just what looks good in a catalog. Garden Grove's sun will degrade lower-grade materials within a few years. We work with products that hold their color and structural integrity through the kind of sun this area sees every summer. The California Energy Commission has published guidance on performance standards for sun-exposed building materials that informs our product selections.
Garden Grove has a high concentration of HOA-governed neighborhoods, and many homeowners discover the HOA approval requirement only after they have already hired a contractor. We ask about your HOA status at the first conversation and prepare the design documents your association needs. Running the HOA and city permit processes in parallel can save four to six weeks on your overall timeline.
Garden Grove's older housing stock means many existing patio slabs were poured in the 1960s or earlier and may need repair before a sunroom can be built on them. We inspect your slab during the site visit and include any necessary prep work in the written estimate - so you know the full cost before a single tool comes out of the truck.
Every one of these details - permits, materials, HOA submissions, slab prep - is something a homeowner should not have to research and manage on their own. We handle each step as part of a complete project, so you get a finished room and clean paperwork, not a half-finished job and a list of follow-up tasks.
Turn your existing patio into a fully enclosed room with walls, a roof, and your choice of glass or screen panels.
Learn MoreA lighter, faster option that focuses on bug protection and shade while keeping maximum airflow through your outdoor space.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up in spring - locking in your project now means you are sitting in a finished room before summer hits.