
Precision Glendale Sunrooms & Patios has served the San Gabriel Valley since 2019, building patio enclosures, sunroom additions, and four season rooms for Temple City homeowners. We know the local housing stock and what it takes to do the job right on the postwar homes that make up most of this city.

Temple City's ranch homes almost universally have covered back patios, and many of those patios sit partially unused because they are too hot in summer and too exposed in winter. Patio enclosures convert that underused space into a year-round room without altering the home's footprint or requiring a full addition.
Temple City's modest lot sizes and single-story ranch layout make sunroom additions a practical way to gain square footage without building up or out in ways that change the character of the home. We design additions to match the low rooflines and stucco finishes common throughout the city.
Temple City gets hot summers and wet winters, and an uninsulated sunroom is only comfortable for a few months of the year. A four season room with low-E glass and connected climate control is usable 12 months a year, which is why it is one of the most popular options among long-term homeowners in this city.
Temple City's mild climate means that a three season sunroom without full HVAC is comfortable from about September through June. If you spend more time outdoors in the cooler months than the summer peak, a three season room is a lower-cost option that still gives you a properly enclosed, weathertight space.
For Temple City homeowners who want airflow and outdoor feel without full glass panels, a screen room is a lightweight option that keeps bugs and debris out while staying open to the breeze. Screen rooms work well on the fully fenced yards common throughout the city, where privacy is already handled by block walls.
Temple City has a range of home styles that have been expanded and renovated over the decades, which means a standard sunroom template often does not match the existing structure. A custom design lets us work with the angles, rooflines, and stucco finishes already present on your home for a result that looks intentional, not added on.
Most of Temple City was built between the late 1940s and the early 1970s. That puts the majority of homes in the 50 to 80 year age range, which means original concrete slabs, older wood framing, and stucco exteriors that have been through decades of Southern California heat and wet winters. When a homeowner wants to enclose a patio or add a sunroom to one of these properties, a contractor needs to understand what is underneath before starting - a slab that looks solid may have hairline fractures from clay soil movement, and a stucco exterior that looks intact may have moisture behind it from years of improper grading. We assess all of this before presenting a plan.
The clay soils throughout the San Gabriel Valley, including Temple City, expand and contract with every wet and dry season. That movement is the single most common cause of cracked driveways, settling patio slabs, and foundation displacement in this area. Any outdoor enclosure project that does not account for soil conditions will develop structural problems within a few years. We evaluate soil and slab conditions as part of our standard site visit - it is not an extra step, it is just how we work.
Our crew works throughout Temple City regularly, and we are familiar with the permit process through the Temple City Building and Safety Division. Most of the homes we work on here are single-story ranch houses with attached or detached garages and back patios accessed through sliding glass doors - a layout that is well-suited to patio enclosures and rear sunroom additions.
Las Tunas Drive and Rosemead Boulevard are the two main arteries our crew uses to navigate across the city. The residential blocks between those streets and the Arcadia border to the north are where we see the most sunroom and enclosure projects - quiet, tree-lined streets with homes that have been owned by the same families for decades and are now being updated to reflect how people actually want to live in them. Live Oak Park near the city center is a familiar landmark to everyone who lives here, and the neighborhoods surrounding it include some of the older and more character-rich homes in the city.
We regularly serve neighboring San Gabriel to the west and Arcadia to the north, and if your home sits near those borders our team can reach you without a long drive.
Call us or submit the contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We ask about your home, your existing patio or yard setup, and what you want to use the space for.
We come to your Temple City home, look at the existing slab condition, roofline, and yard layout, and walk through the options with you. We give you an itemized, written estimate at no charge - you are never pressured to commit on the spot.
After you approve the plan, we submit permits to the City of Temple City and get you on the build schedule. We manage the permit timeline and keep you in the loop without burdening you with the paperwork.
We build the structure, pass all required city inspections, and walk through the finished project with you before we close out. Most Temple City patio enclosures and sunroom additions are done within 3 to 5 weeks of permit approval.
We serve Temple City and the surrounding San Gabriel Valley. Send us a message or call, and we will respond within one business day with a free, no-obligation estimate for your property.
(747) 609-3922Temple City is a quiet, predominantly residential city of about 36,000 people in the San Gabriel Valley, sandwiched between Arcadia to the north, El Monte to the south, and Rosemead to the west. The city is almost entirely single-family homes - most of them ranch-style with stucco exteriors, attached garages, and fenced yards on lots of 5,000 to 7,500 square feet. The bulk of this housing was built between the late 1940s and the 1970s. Temple City has a strong tradition of community events, most notably the annual Camellia Festival, held every February near Live Oak Park and one of the longest-running community events in the San Gabriel Valley.
Home values in Temple City are well above the national average, and the city has a high rate of owner-occupied housing - meaning most residents are long-term homeowners who invest in their properties. Many homes have been renovated or expanded over the decades, and it is common to find a 1955 ranch house that has had a kitchen remodel, a bathroom addition, or a converted garage at some point in its history. That makes on-site assessment important before any new project. Nearby Rosemead and San Gabriel share similar housing characteristics and are also part of our regular service area.
From the streets near Live Oak Park to the blocks along the Arcadia border, we work throughout Temple City. Call today and we will schedule a free on-site visit - no pressure, no hidden fees.