
RoomCraft Inglewood Sunrooms & Patios is the sunroom contractor Redondo Beach homeowners call for sunroom design, patio enclosures, and vinyl sunrooms - fully permitted work by a crew that understands the city's salt-air coastal conditions and postwar housing stock in both North and South Redondo. We reply within one business day and put every estimate in writing before any work begins.

Redondo Beach lots are compact, and the difference between a sunroom that fits the property and one that overwhelms it comes down to design. Our sunroom design process starts with your specific lot, existing structure, and how the room will be used - then produces a plan built around those constraints rather than a standard template.
Salt air from Santa Monica Bay corrodes standard aluminum frames and peels painted wood faster than most Redondo Beach homeowners expect. Vinyl framing does not rust, does not need repainting, and holds its shape through the daily marine layer cycles that coastal properties deal with year-round - making it the low-maintenance choice for homes within a mile or two of the water.
Most Redondo Beach single-family homes have a concrete slab patio already in place at the back of the house. Enclosing that slab with weatherproof panels and a proper roof connection turns an underused outdoor pad into a protected room at a fraction of the cost of a full addition - using a foundation that is already there.
An all season room is fully insulated and climate-controlled, which matters in Redondo Beach where mornings near the Esplanade can be 15 degrees cooler than afternoons just a few blocks inland. The fully built-out nature of the city means most homeowners are adding to an existing structure rather than building on raw land - and an all season room is sized and connected to work within those constraints.
Redondo Beach's mild year-round temperatures make it a natural fit for a four season sunroom - a room that is genuinely comfortable in January and August alike without needing to heat or cool it aggressively. The combination of double-pane low-e glass and proper insulation handles both the damp June mornings and the occasional warm Santa Ana days that roll through the South Bay in fall.
Redondo Beach evenings are among the best in the South Bay - warm, breezy, and comfortable for much of the year. A screen room captures that outdoor experience while keeping insects and blowing coastal debris out, at a cost well below a fully enclosed sunroom. It is a practical option for homeowners who want more usable outdoor living space without a full enclosure project.
The bulk of Redondo Beach's housing stock was built between the late 1940s and the 1980s. Many of these homes have original concrete slab foundations that have been through 50 or more years of seasonal moisture cycles, and a slab that looks level from the surface may have areas of settlement, cracking, or slope that are only visible on close inspection. Before any sunroom or enclosure project starts in Redondo Beach, the existing slab has to be assessed - building on a compromised foundation creates problems that are expensive and disruptive to correct after the room is already framed and glazed.
Living on Santa Monica Bay means salt air is working on every home in Redondo Beach year-round - not just the ones closest to the water. That salt content accelerates corrosion on metal frames, window seals, gutters, and painted wood surfaces faster than most homeowners expect when they compare notes with friends who live further inland. California's Title 24 energy code governs every permitted addition, and the glazing and insulation specifications for a coastal property differ from what is required further east. We document all of that for the Redondo Beach plan check before we start.
Our crew works throughout Redondo Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and patio enclosure work here. Permits go through the Redondo Beach Building and Safety Division, which handles plan check review and field inspections for the city. Redondo Beach runs its own permit office separate from Los Angeles County, and we factor the city's specific plan check timeline into every project schedule we share with homeowners here.
Redondo Beach divides naturally into two halves: North Redondo, with a higher share of condos and townhomes mixed in among single-family houses, and South Redondo, which sits closer to the water and has a denser concentration of detached single-family homes near the Esplanade and Riviera Village. Artesia Boulevard and Pacific Coast Highway are the main corridors we use to reach jobs across the city. North of Artesia the neighborhoods are more varied in property type; south of it toward King Harbor the lots are smaller and the homes tend to be older stucco construction that responds differently to coastal moisture.
We also serve the neighboring South Bay communities. Homeowners in Manhattan Beach and Torrance deal with the same South Bay salt-air and compact-lot conditions we encounter on Redondo Beach jobs regularly.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and we will respond within one business day. You do not need to have a fully formed plan - just tell us what you are thinking about adding and where on the property it would go.
We come to your Redondo Beach property to look at the existing slab, roof connection point, and any HOA or lot constraints before putting a number together. The estimate is written and itemized so you know what you are committing to before any work begins - no verbal ballparks.
We handle permit submission to the Redondo Beach Building and Safety Division and communicate the plan check timeline to you. For condo or townhome owners in North Redondo who need HOA approval, we provide the documentation the association typically requests before we file with the city.
Construction takes two to four weeks once permits are in hand. We schedule around the homeowner's calendar, clean up each day, and coordinate the city's final inspection so the completed room is fully signed off in the public record.
We serve all of Redondo Beach, CA - from South Redondo near the Esplanade to the neighborhoods in North Redondo. Free estimates, written proposals, no pressure.
(424) 414-1258Redondo Beach is a coastal city of about 67,000 residents in the South Bay area of Los Angeles County, sitting directly on Santa Monica Bay between Hermosa Beach to the north and Torrance to the south. The city splits into two distinct areas: South Redondo, which sits close to the water and is home to the Redondo Beach Pier, King Harbor, and the Esplanade - the oceanfront road where residents walk and bike daily - and North Redondo, which extends inland and has a higher mix of condos, townhomes, and multi-unit buildings alongside single-family houses. According to city records, Redondo Beach is one of the more densely settled cities in the South Bay, with most of its housing stock dating from the postwar decades.
The city is fully built out - there is almost no undeveloped land left - which means nearly every sunroom or enclosure project here involves working on and around an existing structure, usually a stucco single-family home or a condo with shared-wall considerations. Riviera Village in South Redondo is a well-known neighborhood center near the water, and most of the residential work we do is within a few miles of that area or in the denser blocks of North Redondo closer to Artesia Boulevard. We also serve nearby Manhattan Beach, which shares the same coastal housing and salt-air conditions that drive most of the sunroom design decisions we make in this part of the South Bay.
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Learn MoreWe serve all of Redondo Beach, CA and reply within one business day. Get a free written estimate before committing to anything.