
Your patio slab is already there. We frame the walls, install the windows, tie in the roof, and handle every permit - turning dead outdoor space into a real room your family lives in year-round.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Stanton, CA takes your existing outdoor slab and encloses it with walls, windows, and a proper roof so it becomes usable indoor living space - most projects run one to three weeks of on-site construction once permits are approved, with a total timeline of two to four months from first call to final city sign-off.
A lot of Stanton homeowners come to us with a covered patio they barely use - too hot in summer, too exposed in fall, and not really a room. The conversion changes that. The finished space connects directly to your home, typically shares your heating and cooling system, and adds measurable square footage to your floor plan. If you want to compare options before committing, our deck-to-sunroom conversion service covers a similar process starting from a wood-framed deck rather than a concrete slab.
The first step is always an on-site assessment of your existing slab - thickness, level, condition - because that determines whether it can be reused as the floor of the new room or needs reinforcement first. We walk you through what we find before a single nail is driven.
If your patio is unusable from June through September because Stanton afternoons push into the 90s, you are losing months of potential living space every year. A sunroom conversion with heat-blocking glass turns that baking slab into a room your family can sit in even on the hottest afternoons. The glass selection is the most important design decision - it determines whether the room is comfortable or just a different kind of hot.
Many Stanton homes from the 1950s and 1960s have modest square footage, and families grow. A patio conversion adds a real room - a dining space, a home office, a playroom - without the cost and disruption of a full structural addition. If you are working from the kitchen table or sharing rooms that were not designed for the purpose, your existing patio slab may be the most affordable solution you have not considered yet.
If the aluminum cover or wood pergola over your slab is rusting, sagging, or letting rain through, you are already facing a repair or replacement cost. A sunroom conversion lets you roll that repair budget into a genuine upgrade rather than spending it on patching something that will need attention again in a few years. The result is a better outcome and a room instead of just a functional patio cover.
Small surface cracks in a patio slab do not automatically disqualify it from becoming a sunroom floor - but they are worth having evaluated before you invest in enclosure. Hairline cracks in a level slab can often be repaired and overlaid. If the slab has shifted or settled unevenly, a contractor needs to know that before walls go up, not after. Catching it upfront avoids a mid-project budget shock.
Every patio-to-sunroom conversion starts with an honest assessment of what you have. If your existing slab is solid and your patio cover is in decent shape, we work with those elements - which keeps cost down and timeline shorter. If you are starting with a bare slab and no cover, or if the existing structure needs to come out first, we handle the full build from the slab up. Glass selection is where we spend real time with every homeowner: the deck-to-sunroom conversion process involves similar considerations, and homeowners often ask us to walk through both options before deciding.
For homeowners who want a simpler outdoor enclosure without full walls and a heating and cooling connection, our enclosed patio rooms service is worth comparing. It sits between a screen room and a full sunroom in both cost and function - a good fit for homeowners who want protection from the elements but are not ready for the full conversion. Every project we take on in Stanton is permitted through the city and includes coordination with your HOA if one applies to your neighborhood.
We evaluate your existing patio slab for thickness, level, and structural soundness before any walls go up - suits homeowners who want to know exactly what they are starting with.
Framed walls with your choice of glass - aluminum framing with insulated panels for homeowners who want year-round comfort and climate control.
Low-emissivity glass with a solar heat gain coefficient rated for Southern California's climate - the right choice for any Stanton homeowner who plans to use the room in summer.
New roof attached to your existing home structure, properly flashed and sealed against marine layer moisture - important in Stanton's coastal-influenced climate.
We work with HVAC professionals to extend your existing system into the new room or size a mini-split unit for homeowners whose current system cannot cover the added square footage.
We submit the permit application to Stanton's Building and Safety Division and prepare your HOA submission package - handling both approval tracks from the start.
Most of Stanton's housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1970s - which means a large share of homes already have a concrete patio slab attached to the back of the house. That slab is the most expensive part of a sunroom conversion to build from scratch, and in many Stanton homes it is already there, waiting to be enclosed. The older a slab is, the more important it is to evaluate it carefully before walls go up - our on-site assessment checks thickness, level, and edge stability so you know exactly what you are working with before any money is committed. Homeowners in Garden Grove and Anaheim face the same postwar housing conditions, and we work across all of these communities.
Stanton's climate adds another layer of planning that is specific to this part of Orange County. The marine layer that rolls in from the Pacific during late spring and early summer brings elevated humidity that can work into gaps around windows and wall connections if the sealing is not done correctly. We pay close attention to how the new room meets your existing exterior wall - the flashing and weatherstripping at that joint is what keeps moisture out of the structure over the long term. Stanton also requires permits for this type of conversion, and we handle the city application and schedule every required inspection so your investment is protected at resale. You can read more about California's energy code requirements for new enclosed spaces at the California Energy Commission.
When you reach out, we ask a few basic questions - patio size, existing cover, and what you want to use the room for. We reply within one business day and schedule a time to come see the space in person.
We come to your home, measure the patio, evaluate the slab, and look at how the new room will connect to your house. You receive a written estimate - not a verbal ballpark - within a few days of the visit.
Once you sign a contract, we submit the permit application to Stanton's Building and Safety Division and handle your HOA submission if one is needed. This phase typically takes three to six weeks, and we keep you updated throughout.
The physical build runs one to three weeks. A city inspector visits at required stages - this is standard and your contractor handles scheduling. After the final inspection passes, we do a walkthrough with you and address any punch-list items before calling the job complete.
Free written estimate. We assess your slab, explain your options, and give you a number you can actually plan around - no pressure, no obligation.
(657) 385-0221We inspect your existing patio slab for thickness, level, and stability before we give you a price - not after work has started. Stanton's postwar housing stock means older slabs are common, and knowing what you are working with upfront prevents mid-project cost surprises.
We handle the City of Stanton permit application, schedule every required city inspection, and deliver a project that is on record as legitimate square footage. In Orange County's real estate market, permitted conversions protect your home's value at resale in ways that unpermitted work cannot.
We specify glass with a solar heat gain coefficient appropriate for Stanton's climate zone - not standard residential glazing. The difference is whether your new room is comfortable in July or turns into a greenhouse. This is the decision that determines whether the conversion is money well spent. The National Fenestration Rating Council publishes the ratings your contractor should be able to cite.
A meaningful share of Stanton's residential neighborhoods fall under HOA rules, and many homeowners do not realize HOA approval is a separate step from the city permit. We ask about HOA status at the first meeting and prepare the documentation the association needs - so both approval tracks move forward at the same time rather than one stalling the other.
Every patio conversion we complete in Stanton is treated as a long-term investment in the home - not a quick job. We stand behind the work with clear written scopes and a process that gives you no surprises.
The same enclosed-room result starting from a wood-framed deck rather than a concrete slab - useful if your existing outdoor platform is elevated.
Learn MoreA lighter enclosure option that sits between a screen room and a full sunroom - good for homeowners who want weather protection without full climate control.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Stanton fill up - reach out now and we can have your written estimate ready within days, with your project start date locked in before the season gets busy.