Transform your Long Island home with our custom sunrooms, liferooms, pergolas, and more! Quality Designs That Improve Your Space And Lifestyle.
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You know the problem. Houston doesn’t have four seasons—it has hot summer, hotter summer, still summer, and Christmas. Your backyard sits empty most of the year because stepping outside in July feels like walking into a wall. Even spring and fall get ruined by mosquitoes or sudden downpours.
A properly built sunroom changes that. You get the light, the view, and the connection to your yard without the sweat or the bugs. No more choosing between roasting on your patio or staying inside with the blinds drawn.
The difference comes down to how it’s built. Insulated glass that blocks heat but not light. Ventilation that actually moves air. Construction that holds up when storms roll through. You end up with space that stays comfortable when it’s 98 degrees outside, doesn’t leak when it rains, and actually gets used instead of becoming expensive storage.
This matters in Nassau Bay because your home is an investment. The median property value here is $339,400, and you’re competing with a market where outdoor living features actually move the needle. A sunroom that works in Texas heat delivers 55-75% ROI because buyers here understand the value of usable space year-round.
We’ve been doing this for over 50 years. Not in some mild climate where any sunroom works fine—in places where heat, humidity, and hurricanes test whether the build actually holds up.
We’re not the cheapest option, and that’s intentional. You’re not paying for the cheapest glass, the fastest installation, or the contractor who disappears after the check clears. You’re paying for CONSERVAGLASS NXT technology that keeps heat out, construction rated for high winds, and a team that’s done enough installations to know what fails in Gulf Coast weather.
Nassau Bay sits right on the water near Clear Lake. You deal with heat indexes over 100, sudden storms, and humidity that makes everything harder. Your sunroom needs to handle that from day one, not fall apart in three years. That’s what 50 years of experience gets you—fewer callbacks, fewer regrets, and a space that actually works.
It starts with a consultation at your home. We look at the space, talk about how you want to use it, and figure out what design makes sense for your property. No pressure, no upselling—just a clear conversation about what’s possible and what it costs.
Once you’re ready to move forward, our design team creates a plan that matches your home’s architecture. You’ll see exactly what it looks like before construction starts. We handle permits and scheduling so you’re not chasing down paperwork or waiting on inspections.
Installation typically takes a few weeks, not months. Our crew shows up when we say we will, does the work without tearing apart your entire house, and cleans up when we’re done. You’re not living in a construction zone for half the summer.
After it’s finished, you get a walkthrough to make sure everything works the way it should. We cover how to maintain it, what the warranty includes, and who to call if something needs attention. Then it’s yours to use—no waiting for touch-ups or final inspections that drag on forever.
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The core of any good sunroom is the glass. CONSERVAGLASS NXT isn’t standard window glass—it’s engineered to block heat while letting light through, with a coating that helps it stay cleaner longer. In Houston, where pollen and humidity coat everything, that matters.
Structure options include aluminum, vinyl, or natural wood, depending on what fits your home and your budget. Aluminum handles humidity without rotting. Vinyl requires almost no maintenance. Wood gives you a custom look but needs more care. We’ll walk through the tradeoffs so you can make the call.
Climate control is where most sunrooms fail in Texas. Proper insulation, ventilation, and HVAC integration keep the space usable when it’s 95 degrees outside. Without that, you’ve built an expensive greenhouse that sits empty all summer. We design for year-round use because that’s the only version worth building here.
Nassau Bay’s location near the coast means wind and storm ratings matter. Your sunroom gets built to handle high winds, not just look good in calm weather. That’s the difference between a space that lasts decades and one that needs repairs after the first serious storm.
We offer financing up to $125,000 with competitive rates if you’d rather spread the cost out. Most sunroom projects here run between $21,000 and $63,000 depending on size and features, and you’re looking at a return of 50-75% when you sell. That’s higher than the national average because Texas buyers actually want this.
Most sunroom projects in the Houston area run between $21,000 and $63,000. That’s a wide range because size, materials, and features all affect the final number.
A basic three-season sunroom with standard glass and vinyl framing sits at the lower end. A fully insulated four-season room with premium glass, custom finishes, and integrated HVAC pushes toward the higher end. Square footage is the biggest driver—a 200 square foot addition costs less than 400 square feet, obviously.
Here’s the part that matters: a traditional room addition in Texas costs $80,000 to $120,000 for the same square footage. You’re paying for foundation work, full HVAC integration, drywall, and everything else that comes with conventional construction. A sunroom gives you usable space for less money and a faster timeline.
ROI in Central Texas markets typically hits 55-75% for four-season sunrooms and 50-60% for three-season versions. That’s above the national average because buyers here value outdoor living features year-round, not just in mild weather.
Only if it’s built wrong. A properly insulated four-season sunroom with the right glass stays comfortable even when it’s 98 degrees outside.
The key is CONSERVAGLASS NXT technology. This isn’t regular window glass—it’s engineered to block heat transfer while still letting natural light through. Standard glass turns your sunroom into a greenhouse. Insulated, low-E glass keeps the heat out and the cool air in.
Ventilation and HVAC integration matter just as much. You need airflow that actually moves, not just a ceiling fan fighting a losing battle. Most of our Nassau Bay installations tie into the home’s existing HVAC system or add a dedicated mini-split unit. That gives you real climate control, not just hope and a prayer.
Insulation in the roof and walls makes the difference between a space you use year-round and one you avoid from May to October. We build for Houston’s climate specifically because we know what fails here. You end up with a room that feels like the rest of your house, not a sauna with a view.
Most sunroom installations take a few weeks from start to finish, not months. You’re looking at minimal disruption compared to a traditional room addition.
The timeline depends on size and complexity. A straightforward addition on an existing concrete patio goes faster than a project that needs foundation work or custom structural modifications. Permitting adds time on the front end, but we handle that process so you’re not stuck waiting on the city.
Once construction starts, our crew works efficiently because most of the components are pre-fabricated to your specific measurements. We’re not building everything from scratch on-site. That means fewer weather delays, less mess, and a faster path to completion.
Compare that to a conventional room addition, which can take two to four months and turns your house into a construction zone. You’re dealing with framers, electricians, drywall crews, painters—all on different schedules. A sunroom streamlines that process because it’s a specialized build with a dedicated team that knows exactly what they’re doing.
Yes, if it’s built to the right standards. Nassau Bay’s location near the coast means your sunroom needs to handle high winds and heavy rain, not just look good in calm weather.
We build to meet or exceed local wind load requirements. That means engineered framing, reinforced connections, and impact-resistant glass options where needed. This isn’t optional in the Houston area—it’s the difference between a structure that holds up and one that becomes a liability when storms roll through.
The glass is a critical component. Standard glass can shatter in high winds or flying debris. Impact-resistant options or laminated glass stay intact even when hit. We’ll walk through what makes sense for your location and budget during the design phase.
Proper installation matters just as much as materials. Flashing, seals, and connections need to be done right the first time because water intrusion is the fastest way to ruin a sunroom. Our installation teams have the experience to handle Gulf Coast weather conditions—we’ve seen what fails and what holds up over time.
We’ve been building in coastal areas for decades. We know what works in hurricane-prone regions because we’ve been doing it long enough to see the results. You’re getting construction that’s tested by real weather, not just rated on paper.
A three-season sunroom works great in spring and fall but struggles in Houston’s extreme heat and cold. A four-season sunroom stays comfortable year-round because it’s fully insulated and climate-controlled.
Three-season rooms use single-pane glass and minimal insulation. They’re designed for mild weather, not 100-degree heat indexes or the occasional freeze. You’ll use it in March and October, but it sits empty most of the summer. That’s fine in some climates—not in Texas.
Four-season sunrooms are built like an actual room addition. Insulated glass, insulated roof panels, weatherstripping, and full HVAC integration. The construction keeps conditioned air in and outdoor temperatures out. You can use it in August without sweating through your shirt or in January without a space heater.
The cost difference is significant—four-season rooms run higher because of the upgraded materials and climate control requirements. But the ROI is also higher because you’re adding functional square footage that works every month of the year, not just when the weather cooperates.
In Nassau Bay, where you’re dealing with heat and humidity most of the year, a four-season sunroom makes more sense unless budget is the only consideration. You’re investing in space you’ll actually use, not a seasonal bonus room that sits empty nine months out of twelve.
Yes. Any permanent structure attached to your home requires permits in Nassau Bay, and a sunroom counts as a permanent addition.
The permitting process covers structural integrity, electrical work if you’re adding outlets or lighting, and compliance with local building codes. Nassau Bay follows Texas building standards, which include wind load requirements for coastal areas. Your sunroom needs to meet those standards to pass inspection.
We handle the permit process as part of the installation. That means pulling the necessary paperwork, scheduling inspections, and making sure everything meets code before the final sign-off. You’re not stuck figuring out what forms to file or waiting in line at the city office.
Skipping permits is tempting because it seems faster and cheaper, but it creates problems down the road. Unpermitted work can kill a home sale, void your insurance coverage if there’s damage, and result in fines if the city finds out. It’s not worth the risk.
The timeline for permits varies depending on the city’s workload, but it’s usually a few weeks. We factor that into the project schedule so you know what to expect upfront. Once permits are approved, construction moves forward without delays or surprises.
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