Paramount homeowners lose months of backyard time to heat and glare. A three season sunroom gives you a comfortable, enclosed space you can use almost every day of the year.

A three season sunroom in Paramount is a fully enclosed addition that lets you enjoy your outdoor space without direct sun, bugs, or wind - most projects are complete within one to three weeks of construction starting, once permits are approved.
Unlike a screened porch, a three season sunroom uses solid walls and glass panels to seal out the elements. In Paramount's mild climate, where winter lows rarely drop below the mid-40s, the practical difference between a three season room and a fully insulated patio enclosure is smaller than you might expect - most homeowners here get ten or eleven months of real use from a three season room.
Paramount's housing stock is mostly older single-story homes built between the 1940s and 1970s - homes with concrete patios and tight lots that are a natural fit for this kind of addition. A good contractor will assess your existing structure before drawing up any plans, because the condition of your foundation and exterior wall matters before any work begins.
If your outdoor furniture sits unused from late morning through early evening because direct sun makes the space unbearable, that is a clear signal. Paramount summers push regularly into the 90s, and an open patio offers no relief. An enclosed sunroom with proper shading and ventilation changes that equation.
Many Paramount homes run between 1,000 and 1,400 square feet - small enough that families outgrow them without wanting to move. A three season sunroom adds a full usable room at a fraction of the cost of a fully conditioned addition. It is one of the most practical ways to gain space in an older, smaller home.
Paramount lots are modest in size and neighbors are close. If you feel too exposed or too visible on your open patio to really relax, solid walls and glass panels give you a level of control that a pergola or shade sail cannot. Many homeowners find they use an enclosed space far more than they ever used the open patio it replaced.
Original patio covers from the 1960s and 1970s are common in Paramount - aluminum structures that rust, sag, or let rain through. When a cover reaches the end of its useful life, replacing it with a proper sunroom gives you something that lasts decades and adds real value to the property rather than just patching the problem.
We build three season sunrooms from the foundation up, handling every phase - permits, framing, roofing, windows, and electrical. Every room is designed around your existing structure and your property's specific layout. For homeowners who want a lighter-touch option, a screen room installation uses mesh panels to keep bugs out while keeping the open-air feel - a good fit for homeowners who prioritize airflow over enclosure.
For those who want more climate control than a three season room provides, we also build fully insulated patio enclosures with heating and cooling connections. The right choice depends on how you plan to use the space, your budget, and your home's existing structure. We walk through all of these options during the free in-home consultation - no pressure to decide on the spot.
Best for homeowners who want an enclosed, weather-protected space at a lower cost than a fully insulated addition.
Ideal for homeowners who want to keep bugs and wind out while maintaining maximum airflow and the open-air feeling.
Suited for those who want solid walls with operable windows for flexibility between open-air and fully enclosed use.
For homeowners converting an existing three season room or screen room into a more insulated, climate-controlled space.
Paramount's climate is one of the strongest arguments for a three season sunroom. Winter lows here rarely dip below the mid-40s Fahrenheit, which means a room that is not insulated for cold weather is still comfortable for ten or eleven months of the year. The challenge is summer: the southeast LA basin gets intense sun from May through October, and UV exposure degrades window seals, painted surfaces, and framing faster than most homeowners expect. Every material we use is specified for this climate - UV-resistant glazing is not an upgrade, it is the baseline.
Homeowners in Compton and Lynwood face the same mid-century housing challenges we see throughout Paramount - older foundations, original concrete slabs, and stucco exteriors that were not designed with additions in mind. We assess every site before drawing up plans, because a structure that looks straightforward from the street may need foundation work or wall reinforcement before a sunroom can be safely attached. Getting that evaluation right at the start is what prevents surprises mid-project.
We schedule a site visit to measure your space, review your existing foundation and exterior wall, and walk through your options. No numbers are committed until we see the site - that is what makes the estimate accurate. We respond to all inquiries within one business day.
Once you approve the design and sign a contract, we submit plans to Paramount's Building and Safety Division. Permit plan check can take several weeks - we set that expectation upfront so you know what the timeline looks like before construction begins.
Construction starts with foundation and framing - the noisiest phase, lasting roughly two to five days. City inspections happen at key points before work is covered. Windows, panels, roof sealing, and electrical follow once framing is approved.
A city inspector signs off before we hand the room over to you. We walk you through how to operate windows and ventilation, and you receive copies of all permits and inspection records to keep with your home's paperwork.
Free in-home consultation. No obligation. We handle permits, inspections, and everything in between.
Every project we build goes through Paramount's Building and Safety Division - permits pulled, inspections scheduled, final sign-off documented. You keep copies of every record. That paperwork protects your home's value and your insurance coverage long after we are gone.
We specify UV-resistant glazing and finishes on every three season sunroom we build in this climate. Paramount's UV index in summer is intense enough to fade frames, degrade seals, and warp panels within a few years if the wrong materials are used. We do not let that happen.
We have been building sunrooms in Paramount and the surrounding southeast LA County communities since 2017. We know the permit process, the housing stock, and the specific challenges that come with older foundations and tight lots. That local experience shows up in how we plan every job.
Paramount is in a seismically active region, and every structure we attach to your home is engineered to meet California's earthquake safety requirements. A contractor who skips these details may quote a lower price - but the difference shows up after the ground shakes. We build for the long term.
These are not promises we make on paper - they are the standards every project is built to. When you call us, you get a contractor who knows Paramount, knows the permit process, and knows what this climate demands from a sunroom. The National Association of Home Builders outlines the standards for residential additions that guide our work.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed, weather-protected room with custom wall and roofing options.
Learn MoreKeep bugs and debris out while preserving open-air airflow with a professionally installed screen room.
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