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’re looking at your backyard or waterfront view through a window, wishing you could actually use that space without dealing with mosquitoes, humidity, or the kind of Texas heat that makes sitting outside feel like punishment. A sunroom changes that completely.
You get a room that’s part of your home but feels like you’re outside. Natural light all day without the glare or the sweat. A space you can use in January or July without thinking twice about it.
Most homeowners in Seabrook add a sunroom because they want more usable square footage without the cost and hassle of a full addition. You’re also looking at a 50-70% return on investment when you sell, which beats most kitchen remodels. But the real payoff is daily: more room to spread out, better light throughout your home, and a spot that actually gets used instead of sitting empty like a formal dining room.
The right sunroom builder handles permits, matches your home’s exterior, and uses glass that doesn’t turn the room into a greenhouse by noon. That’s the difference between a space you love and one you regret six months in.
We’ve been doing this since the mid-1970s. We’ve built thousands of sunrooms across the country, and we know what works in coastal climates like Seabrook, where salt air, humidity, and intense sun put your materials to the test.
We’re not a general contractor who does sunrooms on the side. This is what we do. Every project gets handled by experienced installers who understand structural integration, proper flashing, and how to keep water out where your new roof meets your existing one—the spot where most sunroom problems start.
You’re working with a local sunroom company that pulls permits, coordinates inspections, and builds to code the first time. We’re licensed, insured, and we’ve been serving homeowners in Seabrook and the greater Houston area long enough to know that shortcuts always cost more in the long run.
It starts with a consultation at your home. We look at the space, talk about how you want to use it, and go over options for glass, roofing, and layout. You’ll get a clear estimate that covers everything—materials, labor, permits, the works.
Once you’re ready to move forward, we handle the permit applications and schedule the work. Most sunroom construction takes one to two months from start to finish, depending on size and customization. We’re not vague about timelines because we’ve done this enough times to know what’s realistic.
During installation, we’re tying the new structure into your existing home with proper waterproofing and insulation. The foundation gets poured, framing goes up, windows and doors get installed, and then we finish the interior to match your home. We don’t leave until the final inspection is passed and you’re happy with the result.
You’ll know what’s happening at each stage. No surprises, no disappearing for weeks at a time, no “we’ll get to it eventually.” Just straightforward sunroom construction from people who’ve built enough of them to get it right.
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Every sunroom we build in Seabrook uses CONSERVAGLASS™ NXT, which is engineered to regulate temperature and block UV rays without killing your view. This isn’t standard patio glass. It keeps the room cooler in summer and warmer in winter, so you’re not running a space heater in December or cranking the AC in August just to make the room bearable.
The structure itself is built to handle Texas weather. High-performance insulation, reinforced framing, and a roof system designed to shed water away from your home—not into it. We match your existing siding, trim, and roofline so the addition looks like it was always part of the house, which matters both for resale value and for not making your home look like two different buildings stuck together.
You’re also getting a room that’s versatile. Some people use it as a home office with better light than any interior room could offer. Others turn it into a second living area or a place to have coffee in the morning without stepping outside. A sunroom in Seabrook makes sense because you’re near the water, and you want to enjoy that without dealing with the elements every single day.
We include a 100% satisfaction guarantee and comprehensive warranty coverage. If something’s not right, we fix it. You’re not getting a handshake and a hope—it’s in writing.
Most sunroom projects in Seabrook run between $15,000 and $65,000, depending on size, materials, and how much customization you want. A basic three-season porch conversion with screens and a simple roof sits at the lower end. A fully insulated four-season room with high-performance glass, integrated HVAC, and custom finishes lands at the higher end.
The biggest cost drivers are square footage, glass quality, and whether you’re adding onto an existing slab or pouring a new foundation. If you want the room to function year-round in Texas heat, you’re looking at insulated walls, energy-efficient windows, and a roof system that actually keeps the temperature manageable. That costs more upfront but saves you on energy bills and makes the space usable every day, not just in spring and fall.
We offer financing options up to $125,000 with competitive rates, so you’re not stuck paying cash or putting it on a credit card. During your consultation, we’ll give you a detailed estimate that breaks down exactly what you’re paying for—no vague “starting at” numbers that double once we start talking specifics.
Yes. Any permanent structure that’s attached to your home and adds square footage requires a building permit in Seabrook, and skipping that step can cost you thousands in fines or force you to tear down the entire project.
A lot of homeowners assume a sunroom doesn’t count as a “real” addition, but local building codes don’t see it that way. You need permits for the foundation, electrical work if you’re adding outlets or lighting, and sometimes HVAC if you’re extending your system into the new space. Inspections happen at multiple stages, and if something’s not up to code, you’re stopping work until it’s fixed.
We handle all of that. Permit applications, scheduling inspections, making sure everything meets local zoning laws and setback requirements. You’re not filling out paperwork or dealing with the city—we do it as part of the job. It’s also why working with a licensed sunroom contractor matters. We know what Seabrook requires, and we build to those standards from the start so you’re not dealing with failed inspections or compliance issues down the road.
A professionally built sunroom typically recoups 50-70% of its cost when you sell, and in some cases more if it’s done right. The key is making sure it looks like part of the original home, not an obvious add-on that screams “we needed more space but didn’t want to spend real money.”
Sunrooms that blend seamlessly with your home’s architecture, use quality materials, and add functional living space bring the highest return. In Seabrook’s waterfront market, a sunroom that takes advantage of views and natural light is a selling point buyers notice. It’s extra square footage that doesn’t feel like a compromise, and it appeals to people who want indoor-outdoor living without the bugs and weather.
That said, a cheap sunroom with poor insulation, mismatched materials, or visible water damage will hurt your resale value instead of helping it. Buyers see that and either walk away or use it to negotiate your price down. The ROI comes from doing it right the first time—proper construction, permits, quality glass, and a design that fits your home. That’s what we build.
Most sunroom installations take one to two months from the day we start to the day you’re using the space. Smaller projects on existing foundations can move faster. Larger custom builds with new slabs, electrical, and HVAC integration take closer to two months.
The timeline depends on a few things: permit approval from the city, weather delays if we’re pouring concrete during a rainy stretch, and how much customization you want. We’re not going to tell you six weeks and then show up three months later with excuses. We give you a realistic schedule based on the scope of your project, and we communicate if anything changes.
Once permits are in hand, we’re on-site consistently. Foundation work happens first, then framing, roofing, windows, and interior finishing. We don’t start your job and then disappear to work on two other projects—we finish what we start. You’ll have a clear timeline before we begin, and you’ll know what’s happening at each stage so you’re not wondering when your house will be back to normal.
A three-season sunroom is built for spring, summer, and fall. It’s got windows, a roof, and some basic climate control, but it’s not insulated well enough to stay comfortable during a Texas summer or the few cold weeks we get in winter. You’ll use it most of the year, but there are stretches where it’s too hot or too cold to enjoy.
A four-season sunroom is fully insulated, uses high-performance glass, and integrates with your home’s HVAC system so it stays comfortable year-round. You’re not opening windows and hoping for a breeze in July or running a space heater in January. It’s a real room that functions like the rest of your house, just with a lot more natural light and better views.
In Seabrook, most people go with a four-season room because Texas heat makes a three-season space unusable for a good chunk of the year. If you’re spending the money to add square footage, you want to actually use it every day, not just when the weather cooperates. The upfront cost is higher, but the room works all twelve months, and that’s what makes it worth it.
Water leaks in sunrooms almost always happen where the new roof meets your existing house. That’s the critical point, and it’s where inexperienced contractors cut corners or don’t understand proper flashing and waterproofing. Once water gets in there, you’re looking at rot, mold, and damage that requires tearing things apart to fix—not just caulking over it and hoping.
The way to avoid leaks is to work with a sunroom builder who knows how to integrate the new structure correctly. That means step flashing under your existing shingles, a waterproof membrane at the connection point, and a roof pitch that directs water away from your home. It also means using quality materials that won’t degrade in Seabrook’s humidity and salt air.
We’ve been doing this long enough to know where water wants to go, and we build to stop it before it becomes a problem. Proper installation, the right materials, and attention to detail at every connection point. You’re not going to see water stains on your ceiling two years from now because we didn’t seal something correctly. That’s the difference between a sunroom that lasts decades and one that turns into a maintenance headache.
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