
Keep insects out, Santa Ana debris at bay, and your evenings usable. We build screened enclosures with proper permits, using materials rated for Glendale's climate.

Screen room installation in Glendale, CA means building a fully enclosed outdoor living space with aluminum framing and mesh screening attached to your home, and most single-story installations take three to seven business days of active construction after permits are approved.
A screen room sits between an open patio and a fully enclosed room. It gives you a comfortable, usable outdoor space - free from insects, leaves, and Santa Ana debris - while still letting air move through freely. In Glendale's climate, where warm evenings run from May through October and outdoor living is realistic most of the year, a well-built screen room gets used almost every day.
If you want solid walls, weatherproofing, and year-round protection from the elements, a patio enclosure or a full patio-to-sunroom conversion may be a better fit. We can help you figure out which option makes sense during a site visit.
If you head inside every evening because mosquitoes and other insects make the patio uncomfortable, a screen room solves that directly. Glendale's warm evenings from late spring through early fall are prime outdoor living time, and insects are the most common reason homeowners stop using their patios.
If you spend time each fall cleaning a thick layer of dust and leaves off your outdoor furniture after wind events, your patio needs enclosure. Santa Ana winds carry fine particulate matter from the surrounding hillsides and can leave a visible film on everything in an open patio within hours.
If you have an existing concrete slab with a roof or pergola but rarely use it because it feels too exposed, a screen room is the natural next step. The structure is already partially there. Many Glendale homes built in the mid-century era have exactly this kind of underused covered patio.
If you want a place where children or pets can be outside without wandering into the yard or street, a fully enclosed screen room provides that boundary. It is also a way to let pets enjoy fresh air without the risk of encountering wildlife - a real consideration in Glendale neighborhoods near the Verdugo Mountains foothills.
We build screened enclosures using aluminum framing attached to your home's exterior or set on posts, with fiberglass or solar screen mesh pulled tight into reinforced channels. Every project includes a slab assessment - if your existing concrete cannot support the structure, we tell you before we start, not after. We handle the City of Glendale permit from application through final inspection, and if your neighborhood has an HOA, we help you navigate that approval as well.
If you decide later that you want to upgrade to a fully enclosed space, a patio-to-sunroom conversion builds on what the screen room already provides. For homeowners who want more weather protection without going all the way to a full room addition, a patio enclosure with solid panels is a practical middle step. We will talk through which direction makes the most sense for your home and how you plan to use the space.
For homeowners who want to go further than screening - turning an existing patio into a fully enclosed room with walls and windows.
A step up from screening, with solid panels and more weatherproofing for homeowners who want year-round usability.
Glendale gets roughly 280 sunny days per year, and the outdoor living season stretches from March through November. That means a screen room is not a seasonal accessory here - it is a room you will use for most of the year. The flip side of that sunny climate is the Santa Ana wind season. Every fall, hot, dry gusts come through the foothills and canyons carrying dust, ash, and debris. An open patio takes the full hit. A well-built screen room keeps that debris out while still letting fresh air circulate - so you are not spending your weekends cleaning outdoor furniture after every wind event. Homeowners in La Canada Flintridge and Montrose face the same wind exposure and have the same need for enclosures built to handle it.
The other local factor is Glendale's older housing stock. A significant portion of homes here were built before 1960, and many have existing concrete patios that are cracked, uneven, or undersized for a modern screen room structure. This is one of the most common sources of unexpected cost in Glendale screen room projects - and it is exactly why we assess your slab during the initial site visit, not after the contract is signed. The National Association of the Remodeling Industry provides the professional standards we follow, and the City of Glendale Community Development Department enforces local permit requirements that protect your home's value at resale.
We reply within one business day. We will ask about your existing patio, its approximate size, and how you plan to use the room - so the site visit is worth your time.
We measure the area, assess your existing slab or patio surface, and flag any condition issues upfront. You receive a detailed written estimate so there are no cost surprises after work begins.
We prepare and submit the permit application to Glendale's Community Development Department. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help you understand what to submit for design review. Expect two to four weeks of city review time before framing begins.
Most installations take three to seven business days of active work. We clean up at the end of each day. The city inspector signs off when construction is complete, and we walk you through the finished room before we leave.
No obligation estimate. We come out, measure your space, check your slab, and give you a written quote. Most homeowners hear back from us within one business day.
(747) 609-3922We use heavier-gauge framing hardware, reinforced screen channels, and wind-rated door latches on every Glendale project. A screen room that cannot handle 50-mph gusts is not built for this neighborhood.
Unexpected slab repairs are one of the most common sources of cost overruns on Glendale screen room projects. We assess your existing concrete during the first site visit and tell you exactly what it needs before you sign anything.
We manage the City of Glendale permit process from application through final inspection. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help you navigate that approval process too - so you are not dealing with two separate bureaucracies on your own.
We show you samples of standard fiberglass mesh and solar screen mesh before work begins. For west- or south-facing rooms in Glendale's intense sun, choosing the right screen type makes a real difference in daily comfort.
These are not generic selling points - they are the specific details that determine whether a screen room in Glendale holds up and works well five years from now. You can verify any contractor you are considering on the California Contractors State License Board website before signing anything.
When you want to go beyond screening and convert your patio into a fully enclosed room with solid walls and windows.
Learn MoreMore weatherproofing than a screen room - solid panels that keep wind and rain out while still letting in light.
Learn MoreGlendale's permit process takes time - the sooner you reach out, the sooner you are enjoying your patio without insects or debris. Contact us today for a free estimate.