
Your patio slab is already there. We add walls, windows, and a proper roof so you get a real room you can use every day - not just on mild afternoons.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Glendale turns your existing outdoor slab into a fully enclosed, livable room attached to your home, with walls, windows, a proper roof, and a heating and cooling connection - most projects run three to six weeks of active construction once permits are approved.
Many Glendale homeowners have a covered or open patio they barely use because summer heat makes it uncomfortable from June through September. A conversion changes that completely. Instead of an empty slab baking in the sun, you get a real room with natural light, climate control, and a connection to your living space.
We handle everything from slab inspection to final city sign-off. If you want something more elaborate - like a fully custom build from scratch - our sunroom construction service covers that too.
If your patio is too hot to use by 10 a.m. in July, you're losing months of usable space every year. Glendale's valley heat makes uncovered slabs genuinely uncomfortable for most of the day. A sunroom with proper cooling solves that problem permanently.
If your family has outgrown your home's layout but you love your neighborhood, converting your existing patio is one of the most cost-effective ways to add a real room. It uses space you already own rather than requiring new foundation work.
Small cracks are normal over time in Glendale, where minor seismic activity and soil movement are part of life. If sections have shifted or cracked significantly, a conversion is a natural time to address the slab before it gets worse.
Many Glendale homeowners work from home and need a quiet, distinct space that isn't a bedroom corner. A sunroom conversion creates a dedicated room with natural light - something a converted garage rarely offers in Southern California's ranch-style homes.
We start with a thorough slab inspection before any contract is signed - older Glendale homes often have slabs that need reinforcement, and we tell you exactly what we find upfront. From there, we frame the walls and roof, install energy-efficient windows and doors, run electrical, add insulation to meet California's Title 24 standards, and connect the room to your home's heating and cooling. Every step goes through the City of Glendale's permit and inspection process. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we prepare the design submission and coordinate approval before construction starts.
Some homeowners want a lightly enclosed patio room that feels open and airy - similar to our enclosed patio rooms service. Others want a fully insulated space they can use twelve months a year. We can also pair this work with a deck-to-sunroom conversion if your home has both a patio and an attached deck. Whatever configuration fits your home, we build it to last and build it to code.
Suits homeowners who want a complete, climate-controlled room with walls, windows, and a permanent roof built on their existing slab.
Suits homeowners who don't want to navigate Glendale's Building and Safety Division themselves - we handle all applications and inspections.
Suits homeowners in Glendale's HOA-governed neighborhoods who need design approval before any exterior work can begin.
Suits homes built before 1970 where older, thinner slabs may need work before they can support an enclosed structure.
Glendale sits in the San Fernando Valley foothills, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 95 degrees F and heat waves can push past 110 degrees. An open or partially shaded patio becomes genuinely unusable for months. A properly built sunroom - with insulated walls, energy-efficient glass, and a dedicated cooling solution - gives you that space back without the heat. California's Title 24 energy standards apply to new enclosed rooms, which means the insulation and windows we install are designed to keep the room efficient year-round, not just technically legal. California Energy Commission standards require that new living spaces meet strict insulation and glazing requirements - which benefits you directly.
A significant share of Glendale's housing stock was built between the 1920s and 1960s. Patios on these homes were often poured decades later, sometimes without engineering oversight. In neighborhoods where soil movement and seismic activity are facts of life, a thorough slab inspection before construction is essential - not optional. We serve homeowners across Glendale, including clients near Pasadena and further out toward Burbank, where many of the same housing-stock and permit conditions apply.
We start with a quick phone call to understand your patio size, goals, and rough budget. We reply within one business day and schedule an on-site visit to measure the patio and inspect the slab - there's no obligation and no charge for this visit.
After the site visit, you receive a written estimate that includes slab condition findings. If reinforcement is needed, it's in the estimate - not a surprise later. We finalize the design before any contracts are signed.
We submit all permit applications to Glendale's Building and Safety Division and handle any HOA design submissions your neighborhood requires. This phase takes three to six weeks - we keep you updated so you're never left wondering where things stand.
Once permits are in hand, crews begin framing - the loudest, most visible phase. Windows, electrical, insulation, and interior finishing follow. City inspections happen at key milestones, and we walk you through the finished room before we close out the project.
No pressure. We'll inspect your slab, explain the permit process, and give you a written estimate you can compare against other bids.
(747) 609-3922We assess your existing patio slab as part of the pre-contract process, not after work begins. If reinforcement is needed, it's in your written estimate. That protects you from mid-project surprises that blow budgets.
We submit all paperwork to the City of Glendale's Building and Safety Division and manage the inspection schedule. You don't need to call the city or track down status updates - we do that for you.
Neighborhoods like Verdugo Woodlands and Montecito Park have active HOAs with their own design review requirements. We prepare and submit HOA documentation as a standard part of the project - not an add-on you have to ask for. The{' '}National Association of the Remodeling Industry (nari.org) holds member contractors to an ethics code covering exactly this kind of client-first project management.
Every conversion we build meets California's Title 24 energy efficiency requirements for insulation, windows, and lighting. That means your new room stays comfortable without running up your utility bill - and passes inspection without rework.
Every one of these proof points comes back to the same thing: fewer surprises for you and a finished room that holds up. When the project is done, you have permit sign-offs, a city-inspected structure, and a room that adds real, documented value to your home.
Have a deck instead of a patio slab? We convert existing deck structures into fully enclosed, climate-controlled rooms using the same permitted process.
Learn MoreA lighter enclosure option that adds walls and a roof to your patio for shade and weather protection without full climate-control insulation.
Learn MorePermit slots at Glendale Building and Safety fill up - starting your application now means construction can begin sooner. Call or get a free estimate today.