
From the permit drawings to the final city inspection, we handle every phase of sunroom construction in Inglewood. You get a real room addition with legal permits and a written warranty.

Sunroom construction in Inglewood is a permitted room addition that goes from concrete foundation to finished, inspected space - most projects take eight to fourteen weeks from contract signing to passing final inspection, with two to four weeks of that being active construction on your property.
Building a sunroom in Inglewood means working within California's seismic requirements, navigating the city's permit process, and choosing glazing that handles the South Bay sun without turning your new room into a greenhouse. If you already have an existing sunroom that needs updating, our sunroom remodeling service covers that path. For ground-up new construction, this is it.
Inglewood's housing stock is mostly older postwar homes on modest lots, and the city sits near the Newport-Inglewood Fault. Both of those facts affect how we design the foundation and the connection between the new room and your existing structure.
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 and glare.
A sunroom is one of the most cost-effective ways to add livable square footage without a full interior remodel. 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.
Many Inglewood homeowners are working from home more than they used to, and every room in the house is already spoken for. A sunroom creates a quiet, light-filled space that feels separate from the rest of the house without requiring you to build a second story.
Older patio enclosures in Southern California often used materials that have degraded over time, especially if they were installed before modern building standards. Rather than patching a failing structure, a new sunroom built to current standards will last significantly longer and perform far better.
Our sunroom construction service covers everything from the initial on-site assessment to the final city inspection - we do not hand off work to subcontractors or leave you to manage multiple crews. We also build sunroom additions for homeowners who want a fully permitted new room connected to the existing footprint of their house. Both paths go through the same permit process and the same seismic engineering requirements.
Construction types vary by how the homeowner plans to use the space. Three-season rooms work well for most of the year in Inglewood's mild climate and cost less than a fully conditioned four-season build. Fully insulated four-season rooms are the right choice for homeowners who want a space that stays comfortable on the warmest August afternoon or the coolest January morning. We help you understand the trade-offs before you commit to a design.
Best for Inglewood homeowners who want a comfortable outdoor-adjacent space at a lower cost, usable for the majority of the year.
Fully insulated and climate-controlled - ideal for homeowners who will use the room daily regardless of the weather outside.
New concrete slab poured and reinforced to California's seismic standards - the foundation that everything else is built on.
Wall and roof framing followed by heat-blocking glazing panels, installed and sealed to pass city inspection.
Outlets, lighting circuits, and any heating or cooling connections run during framing and finished before the final inspection.
We handle the full permit application with the City of Inglewood, follow up during the review period, and schedule all required inspections.
Inglewood averages over 280 sunny days per year, and that sun intensity is one of the biggest factors in how a sunroom gets built here. Without heat-blocking glazing, a sunroom in this climate can be uncomfortable by mid-morning in summer. Every sunroom we build in Inglewood is designed around the glazing spec first - the right glass is not an upgrade, it is the baseline. The Efficient Windows Collaborative publishes independent guidance on glazing performance ratings that can help you evaluate any contractor's proposal.
Inglewood's older housing stock and proximity to the Newport-Inglewood Fault also shape how construction happens here. California requires all new additions to meet earthquake-resistance standards, which means the framing, connections, and foundation are built to handle lateral movement - not just vertical loads. Homeowners in Torrance and Carson face the same seismic requirements, and we apply the same engineering standards across every city we serve.
We get back to every inquiry within one business day. During the site visit we look at the space, ask how you plan to use the room, and take measurements. This visit is free and carries no obligation.
After the visit we prepare a written estimate that itemizes foundation work, framing, glazing, electrical, and permits separately. You review the numbers and the design before signing anything.
Once you sign a contract, we submit drawings to the City of Inglewood's Building and Safety Division. The review typically takes two to four weeks. We handle the follow-up and keep you informed throughout.
Foundation, framing, glazing, and electrical work happen in sequence, with city inspections at key stages. You receive copies of all permits and inspection records at project completion.
We serve Inglewood and 11 surrounding cities. Free on-site estimates, written itemized quotes, no obligation. We respond within one business day.
(424) 414-1258We are based in Inglewood and have been working in this city since 2024. We know the Building and Safety Division's plan check process, we know how older stucco homes in this city connect to new additions, and we know what seismic anchoring looks like in practice - not just on paper.
No sunroom we build in Inglewood starts construction before the permits are in hand. The City of Inglewood's inspection record goes into your home's file, which means no unpermitted-addition surprises when you sell, and no renegotiated sale price because a lender flagged the room.
Many Inglewood homes were built in the 1940s through 1960s. We assess the condition of your existing exterior wall before we finalize any design - so if your framing needs reinforcement at the connection point, we find that before construction starts, not halfway through it.
Inglewood sits in one of the more seismically active parts of Southern California. Every sunroom we build meets the state's earthquake-resistance requirements - confirmed by a city inspector before the walls close up. The California Seismic Safety Commission publishes the standards that govern this work. What this means for you is a room that is built to last, not just built to look finished on day one.
A licensed contractor, proper permits, and an itemized written estimate are the three things you should require from anyone building a sunroom on your property. We provide all three on every job.
Update or restore an existing sunroom that is showing its age - new glazing, reframing, or a full interior refresh.
Learn MoreFull new room additions attached to your home, designed around your available yard space and setback requirements.
Learn MorePermit review timelines mean the sooner you start, the sooner your room is ready. Call RoomCraft Inglewood Sunrooms & Patios for a free on-site estimate with a written cost breakdown.