
Stop losing your backyard to Glendale's heat. A fully insulated all season room gives your family comfortable, usable space every month of the year.

All season rooms in Glendale, CA are fully insulated enclosed additions with energy-efficient windows and a dedicated heating and cooling system, so the temperature inside stays comfortable year-round regardless of what the weather is doing outside - most projects complete in four to ten weeks of active construction once permits are approved.
Unlike a basic screened porch or a three-season room, an all season room is built to handle Glendale's intense summer sun and cool winter evenings alike. Homeowners in this area often find that a four season sunroom or a dedicated all season room is the one home improvement that changes how they actually live in their house - not just how it looks.
The key is building it right from the start. The right windows, proper insulation, and a correctly sized mini-split or HVAC connection are what separate a room you use every day from a room you avoid during the six hottest months.
If you walk past your backyard patio most summer days without stopping, Glendale's intense afternoon heat is the likely reason. Outdoor spaces in this valley get brutal by mid-morning from spring through fall. An all season room gives you that same view with the temperature under your control.
A screened porch or basic sunroom with single-pane windows feels like an oven in July and a refrigerator on cool winter evenings. If you can feel outside air coming through the window frames, the room was never built for year-round use. Upgrading to a fully insulated, climate-controlled space changes how often your family actually uses it.
Glendale's housing market is competitive and home prices are high, which makes moving a difficult choice for many families. If you need a home office, a playroom, or a dedicated space to host guests but do not want to move, an all season room addition is one of the most cost-effective ways to gain livable square footage without a disruptive interior remodel.
Buyers in Glendale consistently respond to homes with flexible, light-filled living spaces connected to the outdoors. A fully permitted all season room adds to your home's official square footage, which affects its appraised value. Starting the project now gives you time to enjoy the space before it becomes a selling point.
We build all season rooms from the ground up and we also convert existing spaces. If you already have a patio slab or a covered outdoor area, we can frame up an insulated room around it and connect it to your home's electrical and HVAC systems. For homeowners who want the most light and the cleanest aesthetic, we can tie the project into a custom design plan - our enclosed patio rooms service covers conversions where the patio structure is already in place.
For homeowners who want maximum year-round performance, our four season sunrooms use the same insulation and window standards as a full all season room but emphasize glass-to-wall ratios for maximum natural light. Both approaches result in a fully permitted room addition that adds official square footage to your home.
Best for homeowners who want a new room in a specific location and need full foundation, framing, and systems work.
Best for homeowners with an existing covered patio or carport who want to enclose and insulate the space at lower upfront cost.
Best for rooms that cannot easily connect to the home's existing ductwork - efficient, reliable, and ideal for Glendale's climate range.
Best for homes with existing ductwork that can be extended to serve the new room without a separate unit.
Glendale averages over 280 sunny days a year, which sounds like a great reason to spend time outdoors - until you realize the valley heat can push temperatures past 100 degrees from spring through early fall. Homeowners in areas like Montrose and Burbank face the same solar load that makes an outdoor patio unusable for months at a time. An all season room solves this by letting the light in without letting the heat follow. The windows we specify are rated to manage solar heat gain - not standard residential glass - so you can sit in the room at noon in August without the space feeling like a greenhouse.
Glendale's housing stock also shapes what these projects require. Many homes in the city were built in the 1940s through 1960s on lots that include hillside grades, older concrete slabs, and foundations that predate current building standards. The permit process through the Glendale Building and Safety Division is thorough - plan review adds several weeks before construction begins. We build every room to California's current seismic requirements, which is a real concern in the greater Los Angeles area. Skipping permits or cutting structural corners here is not just illegal - it is a genuine safety risk and a financial liability at resale.
When you call, we schedule a visit to your home - not just a phone quote. We walk your lot, check your existing foundation, note how the sun hits your property, and ask what you want to use the room for. We reply within one business day to set that visit.
After the visit, we prepare a detailed written proposal covering size, materials, and a full cost breakdown including Glendale permit fees. We walk you through every line so there are no surprises.
Once you sign, we submit plans to the Glendale Building and Safety Division and, if needed, your HOA's architectural review committee. Permit review typically takes several weeks - we manage the paperwork and keep you updated throughout.
After permits are approved, we handle foundation work, framing, windows, roof, electrical, and HVAC. City inspectors visit at key milestones. When the work is done, we walk the finished room with you and hand over your final permit sign-off documentation.
Free on-site estimate. No pressure. We reply within one business day.
(747) 609-3922Glendale averages over 280 sunny days per year, and that solar load requires windows with a low solar heat gain coefficient - not just standard double-pane glass. We specify glazing systems designed specifically for high-sun climates so your room stays comfortable at noon in August.
We handle the permit application, plan review coordination, and every city inspection from foundation to final sign-off. You never have to call the Glendale Building and Safety Division yourself. Every room we build is fully documented and legal.
A large share of Glendale's residential lots are sloped, especially in Chevy Chase Canyon and Montecito Park. We assess your existing slab or foundation at the first visit and provide a clear foundation plan before you commit to anything - no budget surprises from slope conditions discovered mid-project.
California's building code requires room additions to meet earthquake safety standards, and the connection between your new room and your existing house must be inspected and verified. We build every addition to current seismic requirements - not as an add-on, but as part of how we build.
Every one of these points comes down to the same thing: a room that is built correctly, permitted legally, and designed for the actual climate and housing stock of Glendale. You can verify our California contractor license through the California Contractors State License Board before you call us. We encourage it.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed, climate-controlled room that works in every season.
Learn MoreA four season sunroom combines maximum natural light with year-round comfort through insulated glass systems.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up - the sooner we submit your plans, the sooner your family has a room they can use every day of the year. Call or submit a form now.