Stop losing your evenings to the ocean breeze. A three season sunroom keeps the light, drops the wind, and gives you a comfortable room that works almost year-round in the South Bay.

Three season sunrooms in Redondo Beach are enclosed glass rooms that you can use comfortably in spring, summer, and fall - and because temperatures here rarely drop below the mid-50s even in January, most of our clients use their rooms all twelve months. Most projects are completed in one to three weeks once permits are in hand.
If you have been thinking about expanding your living space without taking on a full room addition, a three season sunroom is a practical path. The cost is lower, the construction is faster, and the result is a dedicated room that opens your home to your yard. Many homeowners also consider patio enclosures when they want more flexibility in how enclosed the space feels - both are worth exploring if you have an existing patio slab to build from.
Redondo Beach is a city where outdoor living is not a seasonal luxury - it is part of why people choose to live here. A sunroom is the practical way to make that outdoor connection work when the June Gloom rolls in or the onshore breeze picks up after sunset.
If the marine layer or onshore breeze drives you inside every evening, your outdoor space is not doing its job. A three season sunroom blocks the chill while keeping the light and the view. If you have stopped using your patio as much as you used to, that is a direct signal a sunroom could change how you live at home.
The overcast, cool mornings that stretch from late May through July keep a lot of South Bay homeowners off their patios during what should be prime outdoor season. A three season sunroom traps warmth and blocks the wind while letting in natural light, making those gray mornings genuinely comfortable instead of a reason to stay inside.
If you already have a concrete patio or a covered porch that rarely gets used, you may have a head start on a sunroom project - the foundation work may already be done. A contractor can often build directly on an existing slab, which reduces cost and construction time. A space that sits empty most of the year is a missed opportunity.
If your home feels cramped - you need a reading room, a home office, or a playroom - but a full room addition feels like too much disruption and expense, a three season sunroom is a practical middle ground. It adds real, usable square footage at a lower cost than a fully conditioned addition, with less construction disruption.
Every three season sunroom we build starts with a conversation about how you plan to use the space. If you want maximum weather protection year-round, we can discuss our screen room installation as an entry point, or step up to a fully insulated room. If you are converting an existing covered patio, we measure what you have and design around it.
We handle the full scope: foundation work if needed, framing, glazing panel selection, doors and windows, any electrical outlets or lighting you want, and all permitting through the City of Redondo Beach and, where required, through the California Coastal Commission. You do not manage any of the permit paperwork.
Best for homeowners who already have a concrete patio - often reduces cost and construction time significantly.
For spaces that need a new slab or footings first - adds a few days to the build but gives you a solid, level base.
Maximizes light and views while providing full weather protection from wind and rain.
Lets you open the room fully on warm afternoons - important in the South Bay when the sun burns off the morning marine layer.
Redondo Beach sits right on the Pacific coast, which means temperatures rarely fall into freezing territory. A three season sunroom, which is designed to handle all but the most extreme winter cold, functions almost like a four season room here. You get the lower cost and simpler construction of a three season design without giving up much usability. The real challenge in this market is not cold - it is the marine layer, the June Gloom, and the evening onshore wind that rolls in off Santa Monica Bay after sunset.
The other local factor that shapes every project here is the coastal environment itself. Salt air works on metal hardware and sealants year-round, so the material choices we make for a home in Hermosa Beach or Torrance are different from what we would specify for a project twenty miles inland. We use marine-grade aluminum frames, stainless steel fasteners, and coastal-rated sealants on every South Bay project. A sunroom built with standard materials in this environment will start showing corrosion well before it has paid for itself.
For more on coastal construction standards, the California Coastal Commission publishes guidelines on coastal zone development that apply to many properties in Redondo Beach. The California Contractors State License Board lets you verify any contractor's license is active before you sign a contract.
When you reach out, we ask a few questions upfront: how you plan to use the space, whether you have an existing slab, and if you are in an HOA. We reply within one business day. This lets us come to your home prepared rather than just looking around.
We measure the space, assess your existing foundation or patio, and check how the sunroom will connect to your roofline. Within a week or two you receive a written estimate broken down by major category so you can see exactly where your money goes.
We prepare the drawings and permit applications for the City of Redondo Beach. If your property is in the coastal zone, we handle that additional application too. If you have an HOA, we help you prepare the submission package. This phase typically takes four to eight weeks.
Once permits are approved, construction typically runs one to three weeks. City inspections happen at set stages - we schedule them so you do not have to. Before we leave, we walk through the finished room with you and put all warranty documents in writing.
Free estimate, no obligation. We reply within one business day.
(424) 999-1971We hold a current California contractor's license - you can verify it on the California Contractors State License Board website in two minutes. Every project we take on is covered by liability insurance and workers' compensation, so you are protected if anything unexpected happens on your property.
We specify marine-grade aluminum frames, stainless steel hardware, and sealants rated for ocean-side exposure on every Redondo Beach project. Salt air is relentless on standard materials, and we are not going to build you a room that starts showing rust in two years.
We have guided projects through the City of Redondo Beach building permit process and the California Coastal Commission review for properties in the coastal zone. Knowing the local process means we can give you an accurate timeline upfront, not a guess that doubles later.
A large share of Redondo Beach homes - particularly in the Hollywood Riviera and newer townhome communities - are HOA-governed. We prepare submission packages with the drawings and materials specs that local associations typically require, reducing the chance of a rejection and redesign.
Every project we complete in Redondo Beach is built to pass inspection, hold up against the coastal environment, and look the same in ten years as it did on day one. That is the standard we hold ourselves to, and it is why homeowners in the South Bay refer their neighbors to us.
Turn an open patio into a protected room with a screened or glass enclosure sized to your space.
Learn MoreA cost-effective screened structure that keeps bugs and wind out while letting in the South Bay air.
Learn MorePermit slots in Redondo Beach fill up - reach out now and we can lock in your start date before the season fills.