
Superior Stanton Sunrooms & Patios is La Palma's local sunroom contractor, building screen rooms, sunroom additions, and enclosed patio rooms for homeowners throughout this compact northwest Orange County city. We have served the area since 2018 and respond to every new inquiry within one business day.

La Palma evenings from spring through fall are genuinely pleasant, but open patios leave homeowners exposed to insects and Santa Ana wind-blown debris. Our screen room installation service turns the existing backyard patio on a La Palma ranch home into a protected outdoor room that captures the evening breeze without the bugs, working with the low-pitched rooflines common throughout the city.
La Palma's lots are small and tightly packed - most homes sit on modest parcels with limited room on the sides. A sunroom addition built off the back wall of a single-story ranch gives you 150 to 300 square feet of dedicated living space without touching the front setback or the side yards, which matter a lot on properties this size.
Many La Palma homes have original concrete patio slabs that date to the 1960s and early 1970s. Enclosing that existing slab with insulated walls and a weatherproof roof structure converts an underused outdoor pad into a room that adds real square footage to the home without requiring a new foundation pour.
La Palma summers push into the low-to-mid 90s, and that heat makes an uninsulated glass room unusable for months. A four season sunroom with a dedicated mini-split system keeps the room comfortable when temperatures spike in July and August and usable as a home office or playroom 365 days a year.
La Palma's intense summer sun makes uncovered patios uncomfortable by mid-morning. A solid alumawood or stucco-matched patio cover cuts direct UV exposure and cools the patio surface temperature significantly, which is often the first step homeowners take before deciding to enclose the space later.
Some La Palma homes have older alumawood enclosures or screened rooms that were built in the 1980s and 1990s and no longer seal properly against summer heat or winter coastal moisture. Remodeling an existing structure rather than tearing it out and starting over is often faster and less disruptive for owner-occupied homes in this city.
La Palma covers just 1.5 square miles and was built out almost entirely between the late 1950s and the mid-1970s. That means the vast majority of homes in the city are now 50 to 65 years old, sitting on original slab foundations with stucco exteriors, low-pitched rooflines, and attached garages. When you add a screen room or sunroom to a home this age, you are connecting a new structure to walls, footings, and rooflines that were built to different standards than what California requires today. A contractor who works in La Palma regularly understands those attachment points and what they need before any framing begins.
La Palma's clay-heavy soils expand during the wet season and shrink during the long dry summer, a cycle that stresses concrete flatwork and footings year after year. Santa Ana wind events roll through northwest Orange County each fall with gusts that can exceed 50 mph, putting real load on any structure attached to the back of a house. Combine that with the intense UV exposure of a Southern California summer and you have a set of local conditions that require thoughtful material selection and engineering - not just a standard package installation.
Our crew works throughout La Palma regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The typical La Palma job involves a single-story ranch home with a stucco exterior, a low-pitched gable or hip roof, and a concrete slab patio off the back that was poured when the house was originally built. We know how to read those older slabs - where they have shifted, where the drainage runs, and whether the existing footing edge can carry a new wall load without additional reinforcement.
La Palma is a compact, walkable city just off the 91 Freeway, bordered by Buena Park to the north, Cypress to the south and west, and Cerritos to the east. The city is anchored by La Palma City Park, the main green space and community gathering point, and the neighborhoods around it are the most densely residential part of the city. We serve every block in La Palma and know the streets well.
We serve neighboring cities as well. Homeowners in Anaheim and Cypress contact us for the same work - our crew moves between these northwest Orange County cities regularly and brings the same local knowledge to every job.
Reach us by phone or through the estimate form on this page. We reply to every La Palma inquiry within one business day and typically schedule an on-site visit within the same week.
We visit your La Palma home, measure the space, assess the existing slab and exterior wall conditions, and review your goals. You receive a written estimate before any work is agreed to - no pressure, no guesswork on the final number.
We prepare and submit permit drawings to the La Palma Community Development Department on your behalf. Permit review typically takes two to four weeks, and we schedule construction to begin as soon as approval is confirmed.
Most La Palma screen room projects complete in two to four weeks once permits are in hand. We walk through the finished room with you before closing out the job and confirm the permit inspection is signed off.
We serve La Palma homeowners directly from our base in nearby Stanton. Send us your project details and we will reply within one business day.
(657) 385-0221La Palma is one of the smallest cities in Orange County, covering just 1.5 square miles in the northwestern corner of the county. With a population of about 15,000, it is a fully built-out residential community bordered by Buena Park, Cypress, and Cerritos. Almost every parcel in La Palma is a single-family home - there is essentially no undeveloped land left and very little commercial development. That density means the neighborhoods here are quiet and stable, with long-term homeowners who invest in their properties. The city is easy to reach from most of northwest Orange County via the 91 Freeway, which runs just north of the city limits.
La Palma's housing stock is nearly uniform in age and style. Almost all homes were built in a roughly 15-year window from the late 1950s through the early 1970s, which means most properties are now between 50 and 65 years old. The typical home is a single-story ranch with a stucco exterior, low-pitched roof, attached garage, and a backyard with a concrete patio. That uniformity makes the city straightforward to work in - we know what to expect on almost every property before we arrive. Neighboring communities like Buena Park and Cypress have similar housing stock and the same kinds of sunroom and screen room projects we handle throughout La Palma.
Expand your home with a beautiful, professionally built sunroom addition.
Learn MoreEnjoy your sunroom comfortably in every season with full climate control.
Learn MoreAffordable three-season rooms that bring the outdoors inside, naturally.
Learn MoreKeep bugs out and fresh air in with a professionally installed screen room.
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Learn MoreMost La Palma homeowners get a site visit within the same week they call. The sooner you reach out, the sooner we can put a written estimate in your hands.