
Your existing sunroom or patio enclosure was built for another era. We replace and rebuild aging structures with properly permitted, energy-efficient rooms that hold up to Southern California's sun and seasonal Santa Ana winds.

Sunroom remodeling in Stanton, CA means replacing or rebuilding an existing enclosed space - or adding a new permitted addition - most projects take three to five months from contract to completion, including the City of Stanton permit review. The work covers foundation assessment, framing, energy-efficient glazing, electrical, and interior finishing, all coordinated with city inspectors at each required stage.
A lot of Stanton homes have older patio enclosures from the 1960s or 1970s that were added without permits. If yours is drafty, leaking, or just showing its age, a full remodel replaces the structure with one that is correctly permitted and built to current energy codes - which matters both for daily comfort and for resale. Many homeowners also consider a screen room installation as a lighter alternative, or look at sunroom design services first to clarify what kind of space fits their home and budget.
Every remodeling project we take on goes through the full city permit and inspection process. That final city sign-off is what makes the room a legal part of your home - recorded correctly, insurable, and ready to protect your investment when it is time to sell.
If you feel a cold draft when the Santa Ana winds pick up, notice water stains on the ceiling after rain, or spot a roof panel that has started to sag, these are signs the current structure is failing. Older enclosures in Stanton often reach this point after 20 to 30 years, especially those originally added without permits or proper foundation work. Waiting longer usually means more damage and a higher repair bill.
If your existing sunroom becomes too hot to use by 10 a.m. on a summer day, the glass is not doing its job. Older single-pane windows or uncoated panels let heat pour in and trap it inside. A remodel with low-emissivity glass designed for Southern California's sun angles fixes this - the room stays comfortable through the warmest part of the day instead of sitting empty.
Many Stanton homes have enclosures added by previous owners that never went through the city permit process. An unpermitted addition shows up on disclosure forms and can complicate a sale, lower an appraisal, or cause an insurance claim to be denied. Remodeling with proper permits resolves that liability and turns the space into a documented asset rather than a problem to explain.
A sunroom floor that flexes when you walk on it or has visible dips and rises is usually a foundation issue - either the original slab was too thin, or it has settled unevenly over decades. Many Stanton patio slabs from the 1960s and 1970s were poured at four inches or less, which is not enough for a permanent room. Catching this early means a foundation fix rather than a structural failure.
A sunroom remodel can mean different things depending on what you are starting with. If your existing structure is sound, we may be able to upgrade the glazing, replace the roofing panels, and add proper electrical without tearing everything down. If the frame or foundation is compromised, a full tear-down and rebuild is the right path - and that is when homeowners often rethink the design entirely. We offer both full rebuilds and targeted upgrades, and we will tell you honestly which one makes more sense after we see the space.
Every project includes permit coordination with the City of Stanton - that is never optional and never an add-on. Some homeowners also explore our screen room installation service when the main goal is bug control and airflow at a lower price point, or our sunroom design service when they want to think through the space before committing to a specific build. Both are worth a conversation before you decide.
For structures that are too far gone to repair - we remove the old enclosure and build a fully permitted replacement from the foundation up.
For homeowners whose frame is solid but whose glass is old or single-pane - new energy-efficient glazing makes the biggest comfort difference for the lowest disruption.
We evaluate your existing slab before any design work begins - the right call for homes built in the 1960s through 1980s where older slabs often need attention.
Suited for homeowners who want to add insulation and climate control to a room that was built as a seasonal space - extends usability to year-round.
Adds outlets, recessed lighting, and ceiling fan prep to an existing sunroom - a common request from homeowners who want to use the space as a home office or hobby room.
We handle City of Stanton permit submissions and help you prepare HOA approval documentation before a single phase of work begins.
Stanton sits in northwestern Orange County where the sun shines close to 280 days a year and summer afternoons regularly push into the low 90s. A sunroom built without that in mind - particularly the glass selection and the roof attachment - turns into an uncomfortable room by mid-summer. The other seasonal factor is Santa Ana winds, which arrive each fall with gusts that can reach 50 miles per hour or more. Framing connections and roof-to-house attachments need to be engineered for that load, not just for mild weather. Homeowners in Anaheim and the surrounding cities deal with the same conditions we plan around on every Stanton build.
Most of Stanton's housing stock dates from the 1950s through the 1970s - single-story ranch homes on original patio slabs that are now 50 years old or more. Many of those slabs have settled or cracked and are not suitable for a permanent room without repair. California's energy efficiency rules - which apply to all new additions and remodels - also require that windows, insulation, and any HVAC equipment meet current state standards. This is actually a benefit for homeowners: a room built to those standards is more comfortable and cheaper to run. Neighbors in Garden Grove face identical permit requirements, and we navigate those processes regularly across the area. The California Energy Commission publishes the building energy efficiency standards all room additions must meet.
We respond within 1 business day to schedule your free site visit. The first call is short - we ask about your existing structure, how you want to use the space, and whether you have an HOA. You do not need answers to everything yet.
We visit your home, inspect the existing structure or patio area, and evaluate the slab condition and electrical panel. You receive a written estimate broken down by scope - foundation, framing, glazing, electrical, and finishing - so you know exactly what you are paying for.
After you sign a contract we prepare drawings and submit the permit application to the City of Stanton's building department. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help you prepare the approval documentation at the same time. Permit review typically takes four to eight weeks.
Once the permit is approved, construction begins - foundation or slab work first, then framing, then glazing, electrical, and interior finishing. The city inspector reviews the work at key stages. We walk you through the completed room before you make your final payment.
Free estimate, no obligation. We handle the permit from start to finish so you do not have to.
(657) 385-0221We submit plans, coordinate with the City of Stanton building department, and schedule all inspections on your behalf. At project close you receive the signed permit documents - proof your remodel is recorded correctly and legally part of your home.
Stanton's postwar housing stock means many existing slabs are 50 years old or more. We assess the foundation at the initial site visit and flag any repair needed before we finalize a design - not mid-project when changes are expensive and disruptive. The National Association of Home Builders identifies foundation assessment as a critical pre-construction step for room additions.
We specify low-emissivity glass on every remodel where the room faces south or west - it blocks the heat that single-pane or older coated glass lets through while still keeping the room light-filled. Combined with properly engineered framing for Santa Ana wind loads, the result is a room that stays comfortable and stays put through every season.
Many Stanton neighborhoods have active HOAs with exterior modification rules. We ask about your HOA in the first call and help prepare the documentation needed for written approval before filing any permit. Homeowners who have worked with us in Orange County know we do not let HOA approval become a surprise mid-project.
Permit handling, foundation assessment, energy-efficient glazing, and HOA coordination work together to protect you from the problems that surface months after a cheaper contractor has moved on. We have been building and remodeling sunrooms in Stanton and surrounding Orange County communities since 2018, and we know exactly what these older homes and this local climate require.
A lower-cost enclosed outdoor space built around airflow and insect control - a practical alternative when a full remodel is more than you need.
Learn MoreStart with a design consultation before committing to a build - useful when you are not yet sure what type of room fits your home and yard.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up - the sooner we submit your plans to the City of Stanton, the sooner your remodeled room is ready to use.