
Stop watching the ocean from across the room. A three season sunroom puts you inside the view - protected from coastal wind and morning fog - for ten or more months every year.

Three season sunrooms in Rancho Palos Verdes are enclosed glass room additions built for spring, summer, and fall use - and in most cases, all twelve months given the Peninsula's mild winters. Most projects take two to six weeks of on-site construction after permits are approved.
A three season room is different from a standard enclosed porch. It has solid walls, a roof that ties into your home, and windows that open and close - making it a proper room, not just a covered patio. For homeowners in Rancho Palos Verdes, the coastal climate means a three season room functions comfortably for most of the year, with temperatures rarely dropping low enough to make an uninsulated room genuinely cold.
If you are weighing options, our patio enclosures service is a common starting point for homeowners who want to enclose an existing slab or covered area rather than build from scratch.
The marine layer that rolls into Rancho Palos Verdes most mornings keeps open patios cold and damp for hours. A three season sunroom lets you sit in full light - surrounded by glass - while the fog is still thick outside. If you find yourself waiting until noon to go outside, a sunroom gives those morning hours back.
RPV is one of the few places in Los Angeles County where you can see the ocean, Catalina Island, and the city skyline from your own yard. If that view is something you glance at through a sliding glass door rather than sit and enjoy, a three season sunroom changes that relationship entirely. It puts you inside the view instead of looking at it from across the room.
If your patio set sits empty most of the year because the ocean wind makes it uncomfortable, a sunroom solves that. It gives you the light and the view without the wind chill and salt spray. Many RPV homeowners find they use a sunroom daily once it is built, where they used their open patio only occasionally.
If you are planning to sell within the next several years and want to add square footage that photographs well, a sunroom is one of the more visually compelling additions you can make. In a market where buyers pay a premium for homes with views and indoor-outdoor living, a well-built sunroom that frames the RPV landscape is a genuine selling point.
Every three season sunroom we build starts with a site visit to understand your lot, your roofline, and your goals. We design around your sightlines - maximizing glass and minimizing framing so the Pacific stays front and center. For homeowners who want full protection from the elements year-round, we also build patio enclosures with insulation and climate control included.
We also offer screen room installation for homeowners who want airflow and bug protection without solid glass walls. Both options are fully permitted and built to last in a coastal environment. The right choice depends on how you plan to use the space and how much weather protection you need.
Ideal for homeowners who want maximum light and a clear view of the ocean or landscape, with windows that open for ventilation.
A lighter-weight option that keeps bugs and wind out while keeping the feel of outdoor air flowing through the space.
Built from the ground up on a new concrete foundation, ideal for homes without an existing patio slab to build on.
Transforms a covered patio or carport into a proper enclosed room by adding walls, windows, and a tied-in roofline.
The Palos Verdes Peninsula sits on a coastal bluff where temperatures rarely drop below the mid-40s, even in January. That means a three season sunroom - designed for spring, summer, and fall - works comfortably for ten or eleven months here, not just three. The gap between a three season room and a fully heated four season room is almost irrelevant in this climate, which makes it a smart value for most RPV homeowners. The bigger seasonal challenge is the marine layer, which keeps open patios cold and damp from May through July - and a sunroom solves that directly.
We work throughout the Peninsula, including in Palos Verdes Estates and Rolling Hills Estates. We know the local HOA submission processes, the city permit review timelines, and the material specifications that hold up against salt air on the bluffs. For homeowners on ocean-facing lots, we specify aluminum framing and hardware rated for coastal exposure - not standard inland-grade materials that corrode quickly in this environment. California Coastal Commission guidelines shape how we approach exterior additions on properties near the water.
Reach out by phone or form and we will respond within one business day. We ask a few questions about your lot, your goals, and whether your neighborhood has an HOA - so we can give you a realistic picture from the start.
We visit your property, measure the space, and review your roofline and soil conditions. You receive a written estimate covering size, materials, permit handling, and total cost - no phone guesses, no pressure.
We prepare drawings, submit to the City of Rancho Palos Verdes, and manage HOA architectural review if your neighborhood requires it. Permit review here typically takes several weeks - we keep you updated throughout.
Once permits are approved, our crew builds the room - foundation, framing, windows, and roofline. A city inspector signs off at the end, and we walk you through the finished space before we leave the job site.
We handle permits, HOA submissions, and coastal material specs. Call us or submit your details and we'll respond within one business day.
(424) 318-3940We have been building sunrooms in Rancho Palos Verdes since 2019 and know exactly what the city's Building and Safety Division expects. That means fewer revision cycles and a faster path from application to approval.
Every project on the Peninsula gets aluminum framing, marine-grade stainless fasteners, and glazing seals rated for salt-air exposure. We don't substitute inland-grade materials that corrode within a few years on the bluffs.
Many RPV neighborhoods - including communities in Seaview and Miraleste Hills - require HOA architectural review before a permit can be issued. We prepare the drawings and documentation your association needs, reducing back-and-forth.
Every room we build is permitted through the City of Rancho Palos Verdes and passes final inspection. You receive the signed inspection card with your home records - protecting your investment and making resale straightforward.
Choosing a contractor who knows RPV's permit process, HOA landscape, and coastal conditions saves time, money, and frustration. The National Association of the Remodeling Industry recommends verifying that your contractor carries active insurance and has completed comparable projects locally - both boxes we are glad to check for you.
Convert an existing outdoor slab into a protected, furnished room with walls, roof, and windows.
Learn MoreA lighter-weight option that keeps bugs and wind out while keeping the outdoor feel and airflow.
Learn MorePermit timelines in RPV can run two to four months before construction begins - the sooner you start, the sooner you are sitting inside your view.