
You want a real room your family will use every day - not a leaky enclosure or an unpermitted addition that causes problems when you sell. We handle every step of sunroom construction in Inglewood, from the permit application to the final city inspection.

Sunroom construction in Inglewood is a fully permitted room addition built onto the back or side of your home - most projects run eight to fourteen weeks from contract to final inspection, with two to four weeks of active construction on your property once permits are approved by the city.
A sunroom is a real room with a solid foundation, framed walls, large windows or glass panels, and a weatherproof roof. It is not a screen enclosure or a patio cover. In Inglewood's mild climate, it becomes one of the most used spaces in the house - a place for morning coffee, a home office, or a spot where the kids can spread out. If you are still deciding on the layout and design, start with our sunroom additions overview to understand the range of options available.
Every sunroom construction project we take on in Inglewood is fully permitted. That means a city inspector reviews the plans before work starts and visits the site when the structure is complete - so you know the room is built correctly, not just built fast.
In Inglewood, afternoon sun from the west can make an open patio nearly unusable between noon and 5 p.m. for several months of the year. If you find yourself retreating indoors instead of enjoying your outdoor space, a sunroom gives you that light and openness without the heat. Every season you wait is another season of wasted yard.
A sunroom is one of the most cost-effective ways to add livable square footage without a full home addition. If you have at least a 10-by-12-foot footprint available and a wall that faces the yard, you likely have enough space to make it work. The longer you wait, the longer your household operates without the room it needs.
Many Inglewood homeowners working from home need a dedicated, quiet space - and every room in the house is already claimed. A sunroom creates a light-filled space that feels separate from the rest of the house without a second-story addition. A quiet workspace or reading nook is only a construction project away.
Older patio enclosures in Southern California often used materials that have degraded over time, especially if installed before modern building standards. Cracked panels, leaking roof sections, or windows that no longer seal are all signs the structure has reached the end of its useful life. Patching a failing enclosure costs money that is better put toward a proper build.
We manage sunroom construction from first visit to final sign-off. That includes the design and written estimate, permit drawings and permit application to the City of Inglewood, foundation work, framing, glazing installation, electrical rough-in, and all finishing. If you are considering a full redesign of an existing structure, our sunroom remodeling service covers that scope as well.
We also build straight sunroom additions for homeowners who have a clear vision of what they want and are ready to move into the build phase. Either way, you get one contractor responsible for the whole project - not a design firm handing off to a builder who has never seen the plans.
Best for Inglewood homeowners who want a light, airy addition for spring through fall use without the added cost of full insulation.
Best for homeowners who want the room fully usable year-round, with heating and cooling integrated from the start of construction.
Best for homeowners replacing an aging or non-code enclosure that cannot be salvaged with a remodel.
Best for homeowners adding a sunroom where no structure currently exists, starting from a new concrete foundation.
Inglewood averages over 280 sunny days per year, which makes a sunroom appealing - but also means heat gain is a genuine design concern that less experienced contractors overlook. We specify high-performance glazing on every build here because the sun exposure in the South Bay is intense enough that standard glass creates uncomfortable rooms by mid-morning in summer. The glazing decision is made at the design stage, not as an afterthought. Homeowners in nearby Hawthorne, CA face the same conditions and benefit from the same approach.
Inglewood's older housing stock - most homes were built in the 1940s through 1960s - also shapes how construction goes. Older wood-frame homes sometimes need reinforcement at the point where the new room connects to the existing exterior wall. We assess that wall condition before finalizing any design, so the connection is engineered correctly from the start. California also requires all room additions to meet earthquake-resistance standards, which means the foundation and framing anchors are built more robustly than you would find in most other states - and that added structural integrity benefits you for the life of the home. Homeowners in Compton, CA face the same seismic requirements, and we build to those standards there as well.
We reply within one business day. We ask a few questions about the space and your budget so we can make the on-site visit as productive as possible. No commitment at this stage.
We visit your property, take measurements, check the exterior wall condition, and review your setback requirements. After the visit, we prepare a written design proposal and a clear cost breakdown. Take your time reviewing it - we answer every question before asking you to sign anything.
Once you approve the design and sign a contract, we submit permit drawings to the City of Inglewood. Permit review typically takes two to four weeks. During that window, we finalize material selections and prepare the construction schedule.
Construction begins with the foundation slab, then framing, then glazing and exterior cladding, then electrical and interior finishing. The active build phase typically runs two to four weeks for a standard sunroom. A city inspector visits at the required checkpoints.
Free on-site visit. Clear, itemized quote. We handle the permits so you do not have to.
(424) 414-1138We handle the entire permit application process with the City of Inglewood's Building and Safety Division - submitting drawings, following up, and scheduling inspections. You do not need to manage any of that. You will always know where things stand, and nothing gets closed up before an inspector signs off.
California requires all room additions to meet earthquake-resistance requirements, and Inglewood's location near an active fault makes this especially relevant. We design every foundation connection and framing anchor to meet those standards from the start. The National Sunroom Association sets industry standards our work is built to meet.
We do not offer budget glass as a default and then upsell you to something that actually works in Inglewood's climate. Heat-blocking, low-emissivity glass is our baseline specification on every build here - because a sunroom you cannot comfortably use in summer is not worth building.
Many Inglewood homes were built in the 1940s through 1960s, and we assess your existing exterior wall before committing to a design. If the wall needs reinforcement at the connection point, we find it during the site visit - not after we have already started cutting. Your project stays on budget and on schedule.
The combination of full permit management, seismic engineering, and climate-specific glazing means your finished sunroom is legal, safe, and genuinely comfortable - not just built to a price point. That is the standard we hold every project to, regardless of size.
Already have a sunroom that needs updating? We handle full remodels and upgrades to existing structures.
Learn MoreBrowse the full range of sunroom addition types and sizes available for Inglewood homes.
Learn MorePermit review slots fill up fast - contact us now and we can get your project into the queue before the next wait.