
La Habra Sunrooms and Patios builds permitted sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for La Habra homeowners. We have been working in this city since 2019, and we know the ranch-style homes here inside and out.

La Habra's postwar ranch homes were built with large backyards that are ideal for a permitted sunroom addition. We design the addition to match the low roofline and stucco exterior common on these properties, so the finished room looks like it was always part of the house.
Most La Habra ranch homes have a concrete patio slab in the backyard that already exists as a foundation. Enclosing that space converts an underused outdoor area into a comfortable room without requiring new ground-up construction, which keeps costs down and permits simpler.
La Habra's warm spring and fall evenings are when most homeowners want to spend time outside, but insects and the occasional Santa Ana wind-driven debris make an open patio less comfortable. A screen room gives you filtered outdoor air without the nuisances, at a fraction of the cost of a full enclosure.
Even in La Habra's mild climate, a climate-controlled four-season sunroom adds a room you can use every day of the year, not just during comfortable months. Insulated glass and a connected HVAC supply or mini-split keep the room usable through summer heat spikes and the occasional cold January morning.
La Habra gets intense direct sun from May through October, and a solid patio cover dramatically reduces how hot your patio feels during those months. It also protects the concrete slab from prolonged UV exposure, which slows the surface degradation common on unshaded slabs in this climate.
Many La Habra homes had sunrooms or patio enclosures added in the 1980s and 1990s that are now showing their age. Drafty windows, old single-pane glazing, and outdated frames are common issues we see. A targeted remodel can correct these problems without tearing the entire structure down.
Most of La Habra's homes were built between the 1940s and 1970s. These postwar ranch homes have low-pitched roofs, attached garages, and slab foundations - all of which create specific constraints for any room addition. A contractor who has only worked on newer construction in other cities will not automatically know how to tie a new room into a 1960s wall assembly without creating water intrusion at the roof connection. We have built on these properties for years and know exactly where those vulnerabilities are.
La Habra also has a mix of flat and hillside properties. Homes toward the north and east, near the Puente Hills, sit on sloped lots where drainage runs differently and soil movement is a regular concern. Flat-lot homes closer to the center of the city have their own considerations, including mature trees with root systems that can disrupt any new foundation work near an existing patio. Getting the site assessment right before quoting saves homeowners from surprises after the work starts.
Our crew has been working in La Habra since 2019, pulling permits regularly from the La Habra Community Development Department for sunroom and patio enclosure projects. We know which inspectors are assigned to this area and what the standard inspection sequence looks like for room additions here.
La Habra runs along Imperial Highway and Lambert Road as its main east-west corridors, with neighborhoods spreading north toward the Puente Hills and south toward La Mirada. Whether your home is near the Children's Museum in the heart of the city or up in the Westridge area above town, the types of homes we see are consistent: single-story ranch construction on lots between 6,000 and 10,000 square feet, most built before 1975. We have seen every variation of that floor plan.
Neighboring Brea, CA is just to the east, and we work across both cities regularly. Homeowners in Fullerton to the south also call us, and you can see our work throughout this part of northwestern Orange County.
Contact us by phone or through the form on this page. We reply within one business day and schedule a time to visit your property at your convenience.
We visit your La Habra home, measure the space, check the existing foundation or slab, and look at the roof connection point. You receive a written price before any work begins - no vague estimates, no surprise line items later.
We file the permit with La Habra Building and Safety and schedule construction once approved. Most La Habra sunroom builds take three to eight weeks from permit approval, depending on size and complexity.
We coordinate the final inspection with the city and walk through the finished room with you. You receive the permit sign-off documentation for your records, which matters when you eventually sell the home.
We serve La Habra homeowners with no-pressure estimates and written quotes. Call us or fill out the form and we will get back to you within one business day.
La Habra is a city of about 62,000 people sitting on the border of Los Angeles and Orange counties, surrounded by Brea, Fullerton, La Mirada, and Whittier. The city was originally citrus-farming country, and it transitioned into a fully built-out residential community through the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. Today, more than half of its roughly 20,000 housing units are owner-occupied, and nearly all of the construction happening here is renovation and improvement on existing homes rather than new builds. Landmarks like the Children's Museum at La Habra, housed in a historic 1923 train depot, give the city a distinct local identity that its residents are proud of.
Residential neighborhoods in La Habra range from the flat streets near the center of town to the hillside properties in the northern and eastern sections near the Puente Hills. The Westridge area above town is one of the city's more recognizable upscale communities, while the older neighborhoods closer to downtown have the dense, tree-lined character of mid-century suburban development. The mature landscaping on these older streets is part of what makes them attractive - and it is also why root damage to patios and driveways is such a consistent issue here. Nearby Brea to the east shares many of the same housing characteristics, and homeowners in both cities often have similar project needs.
Enjoy your sunroom year-round with fully insulated four-season construction.
Learn MoreKeep bugs out and fresh air in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreStylish enclosed patio rooms that blend indoor comfort with outdoor views.
Learn MoreGlass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and extend your outdoor season.
Learn MoreWe are based right here in La Habra and we respond within one business day. Get a written quote with no obligation.