
Rancho Palos Verdes Sunrooms & Patios builds and remodels sunrooms, patio enclosures, and enclosed patio rooms throughout Redondo Beach. We work on the older homes that make up most of this city - from North Redondo condos with shared-wall constraints to South Redondo single-family lots near the beach - and we specify materials that hold up in the salt air environment along Santa Monica Bay. Every inquiry gets a response within 1 business day.

Redondo Beach is a fully built-out city, and older sunrooms added to homes in the 1980s and 1990s now show the effects of years of salt air, marine moisture, and UV exposure. Our sunroom remodeling work brings these structures up to current glass, insulation, and framing standards so they function the way they were supposed to when they were first built.
Lot sizes in Redondo Beach are compact, and an open patio can be less useful than it looks when the morning marine layer rolls in off the ocean. Enclosing a covered patio converts that underused space into a weatherproof room without expanding the home footprint or disturbing the existing slab.
The daily coastal fog that settles over Redondo Beach through spring and summer keeps the air damp longer than most homeowners expect. A four season sunroom with proper insulation and tight-seal framing blocks that moisture while giving you a light-filled space that works comfortably through every month of the year.
Redondo Beach gets reliable afternoon sea breezes off Santa Monica Bay that make outdoor evenings pleasant for much of the year. A screen room captures that natural airflow while keeping out insects and windblown debris - a practical upgrade on small South Redondo lots where every square foot of outdoor space counts.
Many postwar Redondo Beach homes have original concrete patios that were poured in the 1950s and 1960s and are still structurally sound. Converting that slab into a proper enclosed sunroom avoids the cost of a new pour and adds a full room to the home without a major structural addition.
For Redondo Beach homeowners who want a lower-maintenance framing material, vinyl resists the salt air corrosion that affects standard aluminum finishes close to the water. Vinyl frames do not rust or fade and require very little ongoing care, which matters in a coastal environment where annual exterior maintenance is already a given.
Redondo Beach is a coastal city of about 67,000 residents on Santa Monica Bay where the housing stock is almost entirely from the postwar era - most homes were built between the late 1940s and the 1980s. That age means original plumbing, older electrical panels, and existing concrete slabs that have had decades of exposure to coastal moisture. When a homeowner wants to enclose a patio or add a sunroom, the existing structure is often the starting point, and a contractor needs to assess what is actually there before drawing up plans. Discovering an undersized slab or corroded foundation hardware mid-project is avoidable when the estimate visit is done right.
Salt air is the ongoing challenge for any exterior project in Redondo Beach. Homes within a mile or two of the water - which is most of the city - see accelerated corrosion on metal fixtures, fasteners, and framing hardware. Standard residential- grade components that hold up fine in an inland city can show rust and seal failure within a few years here. We select materials specifically for the coastal South Bay environment on every Redondo Beach project, not the same materials we would use on a home in a non-coastal neighborhood.
Our crew works throughout Redondo Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the Redondo Beach Building and Safety Division and are familiar with the plan check requirements for residential additions in this city. North Redondo has a higher concentration of condos and townhomes governed by HOAs, which sometimes requires coordination with the association before work can begin. We flag those situations during the estimate visit so there are no surprises once the project is underway.
South Redondo, the streets near Riviera Village, and the coastal strip along the Esplanade have the city's highest concentration of single-family homes close to the water. These properties face the most direct salt air exposure, and we account for that in material selection and sealant specification. The Redondo Beach Pier and King Harbor are the city's most visible landmarks, and most of the residential neighborhoods fan out from Pacific Coast Highway and Artesia Boulevard - streets we know well from years of regular work here.
We serve homeowners in neighboring Gardena to the north, where the housing stock has similar postwar characteristics, and in Torrance to the south, which shares the same coastal marine environment and postwar building conditions as Redondo Beach.
We respond within 1 business day by phone or through the contact form. We schedule a free on-site estimate at a time that works for you, typically within a few days of your first contact.
We visit your Redondo Beach property, inspect the existing patio or structure, assess salt air exposure conditions, and provide a written estimate. You are not required to be home for the full visit, but a brief walkthrough with you helps us understand how you plan to use the space.
We prepare plans and submit the permit application to the City of Redondo Beach. Once permits are approved, we confirm the build schedule and coordinate all required inspections.
Most remodels take 2 to 4 weeks and most new enclosures take 3 to 6 weeks. We clean up at the end of each workday and do a final walkthrough with you before the project is closed out.
We serve Redondo Beach homeowners with written estimates, coastal-grade materials, and a permit-ready process that handles everything from plan prep to final inspection.
(424) 318-3940Redondo Beach is a coastal city of about 67,000 people on Santa Monica Bay in Los Angeles County. The city divides into two distinct halves: South Redondo, which sits closer to the water and has a higher concentration of single-family homes and higher property values, and North Redondo, which mixes single-family houses with condos, townhomes, and multi-unit buildings from the 1970s and 1980s. The Redondo Beach Pier and King Harbor are the city's most recognized landmarks - the horseshoe-shaped pier draws locals and visitors year-round. The Esplanade runs along the oceanfront in South Redondo, and Riviera Village nearby is a walkable shopping and dining district that most long-time residents know well.
Redondo Beach is a fully built-out city with almost no open land remaining for new construction. Nearly every home here is from the postwar era, which means homeowners are dealing with older structures that need ongoing upkeep rather than new builds. Owner-occupancy rates are notably higher than in much of Los Angeles County, and homeowners here tend to invest in long-term improvements. The city borders Torrance to the south, which shares similar coastal conditions and postwar housing characteristics, and Hawthorne to the northeast, where the housing stock transitions to a slightly different mix of property types.
Call us or submit the form today - estimates are free, written, and specific to your Redondo Beach property. We respond within 1 business day.