Your concrete patio is already the hardest part of the job. We frame the walls, set the windows, build the roof, and hand you a room you can actually use every month of the year.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Inglewood means building walls, installing windows, adding a proper roof, and connecting the new room to your home on top of the concrete slab that is already there, and most jobs are complete in six to twelve weeks from permit approval.
If you have a solid patio slab attached to your house, you already own the most expensive component of any room addition. The slab is what would cost the most to build from scratch, and because you have it, the gap between what you have and what you want is much smaller than most homeowners expect. A patio-to-sunroom conversion in Inglewood closes that gap by framing walls on the existing concrete, setting energy-efficient windows, and running whatever electrical or HVAC connections the new room needs.
Homeowners who want something simpler - shade, bug protection, and a covered outdoor feel without full walls - sometimes consider a screen room installation first. But if the goal is a true indoor room with temperature control and year-round usability, a full sunroom conversion is the right call.
Inglewood summer afternoons bring intense heat and glare that make an open patio uncomfortable from late morning through early evening. If you avoid your patio for months at a time because of the sun, a sunroom with proper glazing and ventilation would let you reclaim that space. You would have a shaded, comfortable room that works even on the hottest days.
If your patio is sound underfoot, has no major cracks, and sits against the house, you already have the foundation for a conversion. A contractor can assess whether the slab is thick enough to support walls and a roof. If it is, you are ahead of homeowners who would need to pour a new foundation from scratch - which is the single most expensive part of any addition.
Inglewood's housing market is competitive, and moving to get more space is expensive and disruptive. If your family has outgrown your current layout - you need a home office, a playroom, or a place to host guests - a sunroom conversion adds real square footage without the upheaval of relocating. It is one of the more cost-effective ways to expand your home's livable area.
If your patio sits under or near LAX flight paths, it can feel too open and loud to be enjoyable. Enclosing the space with properly selected windows creates a meaningful sound buffer. Many Inglewood homeowners near flight corridors find they use the converted space daily once the noise and exposure issues are gone.
Every conversion starts with an honest assessment of your existing slab - its thickness, condition, and how it connects to the house. From there, we handle the full build: wall framing, window installation, roof structure, rough electrical, insulation, and interior finishing. Depending on how you plan to use the space, we can connect the new room to your home's existing heating and cooling system or set it up as a well-ventilated three-season room. Homeowners who want the most flexibility year-round often opt for a four season sunroom configuration with full climate control, while those on a tighter budget frequently find that a well-insulated room with operable windows handles most of Inglewood's weather without any mechanical cooling at all.
We also handle every step of the permit and approval process through the City of Inglewood's Building and Safety Division. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help prepare that submission as well. For homeowners who want a finished room that genuinely feels like it was always part of the house, we coordinate interior finishes - flooring, trim, and paint - that match the existing home. Those who want something simpler can also explore a enclosed patio room option, which delivers a weatherproofed and screened space with less structural work involved.
Best for homeowners who want a comfortable, weatherproof room for most of the year without a full HVAC connection.
Best for homeowners who want year-round comfort and plan to use the space as a home office, living area, or regular dining room.
Best for homeowners who want airflow and bug protection without full glass walls or a conditioned interior.
Best for homeowners who want the new room to match the style and finishes of the existing home from day one.
A large share of Inglewood's residential housing was built between the 1940s and 1970s, and those postwar homes almost always came with a concrete patio poured right against the back of the house. Those slabs have been sitting there for decades - some in excellent condition, some with minor cracking that needs attention. Either way, they represent a head start that homeowners in newer subdivisions simply do not have. When our crew assesses your slab at the first site visit, we are looking at whether it can bear the load of new walls and a roof. In most cases it can, and that honest assessment is what lets us give you a real price before a single dollar is committed.
The proximity to LAX is the other factor that makes this service particularly relevant here. An open patio under a busy flight corridor is a space many Inglewood homeowners barely use. Enclosing it with multi-pane windows built to California's energy efficiency standards changes the experience completely - the room becomes quiet enough to work in, comfortable enough to eat in, and private enough to actually relax in. Homeowners who are starting from a raised wood or composite deck rather than a concrete slab should look at our deck-to-sunroom conversion service instead - the structural assessment and framing approach are different, though the end result is the same finished room. We serve the full city, including homeowners in Gardena and Hawthorne, where the same older housing stock and regional conditions apply.
We reply within one business day and schedule a visit to walk your patio in person. We check the slab thickness, the roofline, and how the space connects to your home - because no honest contractor can give you a real price without seeing it. The site visit takes about an hour and costs you nothing.
Within a week or two of the site visit, you receive a written quote broken down by major work category - foundation assessment, framing, windows, roof, electrical, and finishing. You know exactly where the money goes before you sign anything.
We submit the permit application to Inglewood's Building and Safety Division and, if your neighborhood requires it, prepare your HOA submission. This stage typically takes two to four weeks - we manage it so you do not have to become an expert in the city's process.
Once permits are in hand, framing begins. A city inspector checks the structure before walls are closed in, and again at the final stage. Before the job is done, we walk through the finished room with you - every window, door, and outlet confirmed working before the final invoice.
We assess your slab, handle the permit, and build to city inspection standards. No surprises, no pressure - just a straight answer and a written estimate.
(424) 414-1258We are based in Inglewood and know the permit office, the HOA landscape in newer neighborhoods near SoFi Stadium, and the way mid-century lots are laid out across the city. That local knowledge means fewer delays and fewer surprises on your project.
Some Inglewood homes have older patio slabs that need reinforcement before a sunroom can be built on top of them. We check this at the very first visit and tell you honestly what we find - no surprises buried in a change order halfway through the project.
Every patio conversion we complete goes through Inglewood's Building and Safety Division with inspections at key stages. That means the room is on record, legal, and documented - which protects your family now and your home's value when you sell.
We specify multi-pane, low-e glazing on every conversion as a baseline - not an upgrade. In a city under LAX flight paths with warm summer afternoons, the difference between a properly glazed room and standard glass is significant. For verified glazing performance ratings, see the National Fenestration Rating Council.
Every job we take starts with an honest slab assessment and ends with a city inspector signing off on the finished room. That two-step approach - honest upfront, verified at the end - is what separates a conversion you can trust from one that creates problems at resale.
Have a wood or composite deck instead of a slab? We assess the existing structure and build a fully enclosed room on top of it.
Learn MoreA lighter alternative that weatherproofs your patio with screened or glass panels without full wall construction.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up - the sooner we submit your application, the sooner you are enjoying your new room. Call or request an estimate now.