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 not looking to move. You like your neighborhood, your schools, your commute. But you need more space that doesn’t feel like a compromise.
A properly built sunroom gives you that. Not a screened porch that’s useless from June through September. Not a patio you abandon when the pollen hits or the temperature drops. A real room with real climate control that you’ll actually use.
Spring homeowners are seeing 55-75% ROI on 4-season sunrooms in Central Texas markets. That’s not just added square footage on paper. That’s usable space buyers value when it’s time to sell. Homes with sunrooms are selling faster here—one recent listing closed in 11 days with multiple offers while the market average sat at 28 days.
You get a room that works when it’s 100 degrees in August and when cold fronts roll through in January. That’s the difference between an addition that pays off and one that collects dust.
We’ve been building custom sunrooms for over 40 years. We’re one of the largest manufacturers of seasonal enclosures and year-round sunrooms worldwide, and we work with factory-certified contractors who know Spring’s climate, building codes, and what actually holds up here.
Spring’s housing market is hot. Median home prices hit $263K this year, up 4.4% year-over-year, with inventory sitting at just 2.2 months. Homeowners here aren’t just looking for more space—they’re looking for smart investments that increase value and livability.
We’re not the cheapest option, and that’s intentional. You’re paying for materials that handle Texas weather, installation that doesn’t leak when the rain hits, and a room that stays comfortable without cranking your AC bill through the roof.
It starts with an on-site consultation. We look at your space, talk through how you’ll actually use the room, and discuss what works with your home’s layout and your budget. No high-pressure close. Just a real conversation about what’s possible.
From there, we design a custom sunroom that fits your home. That includes choosing framing materials—aluminum, vinyl, or natural wood—and selecting glass options like our CONSERVAGLASS™ NXT with UV protection and stay-clean technology. Everything is built to handle Spring’s weather: sudden rainstorms, intense sun, high humidity, and temperature swings.
Installation is handled by licensed, insured contractors who know what they’re doing. If your sunroom needs electrical work or HVAC, we bring in the right people with the right licenses. The timeline depends on the scope, but we keep you updated throughout so there are no surprises.
Once it’s done, you have a climate-controlled space that works year-round. Not just March through May. Not just when the weather cooperates. Every month.
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You’re getting a 4-season sunroom designed for Texas. That means proper insulation, energy-efficient glass, and climate control that keeps the room comfortable when it’s 100 degrees outside. It’s not a three-season porch. It’s a real addition to your home.
Spring has 86% single-family detached homes and a 74.8% homeownership rate. People here invest in their properties because they plan to stay—or because they know what sells. Outdoor living space is huge in Texas, and a sunroom that actually works in our climate stands out.
The construction process includes everything: foundation work, framing, glass installation, and any electrical or HVAC integration needed. We use materials built to last—vinyl windows with 87% UV-blocking tint, hurricane-proof glass rated up to Category 5 storms, and finishes that match your home’s style.
You’ll also have financing options if you need them. Monthly payments typically run $200-$400, which is easier to manage than dropping $40,000 upfront. And you start using the space immediately instead of waiting until you’ve saved enough to pay cash.
Most custom sunroom projects in the Spring area run between $25,000 and $60,000 depending on size, materials, and features. A basic 12×12 three-season room starts lower. A fully insulated 4-season sunroom with HVAC integration and premium glass runs higher.
The cost depends on what you’re building. If you want a space that works year-round in Texas heat, you’re looking at insulated walls, energy-efficient glass, and climate control. That’s not optional if you actually want to use the room in July.
Financing is available if the upfront cost is a concern. Most homeowners in Spring finance because the monthly payment is manageable and they get to enjoy the space right away instead of waiting years to save up. We offer unsecured loans up to $125,000 with competitive rates, so you’re not stuck paying cash or putting it on a credit card.
Yes. Four-season sunrooms in Central Texas markets typically return 55-75% of the investment when you sell. That’s higher than the national average because outdoor living space is so valued here.
Spring’s real estate market is competitive right now. Homes are selling fast—2.2 months of inventory with a median price of $263K, up 4.4% year-over-year. Well-appointed homes with functional additions like sunrooms are attracting more buyers and closing faster. One recent example sold in 11 days with multiple offers while comparable homes sat for nearly a month.
Even if the sunroom doesn’t count as traditional square footage, it’s usable space that buyers notice. Professional installation matters here. Sunrooms we install see 10-15% higher resale values compared to DIY jobs because buyers trust the quality and don’t worry about leaks, structural issues, or code violations.
A properly built 4-season sunroom can. A cheap three-season porch can’t. The difference is insulation, glass quality, and climate control.
Texas summers are brutal. Without proper insulation and HVAC, a sunroom becomes unusable from June through September—that’s four months you’re locked out of a space you paid for. Our sunrooms are built with insulated walls, energy-efficient glass that blocks 87% of UV rays, and integration for heating and cooling so the room stays comfortable year-round.
Spring’s weather swings fast. You’ll see August-like heat one day and a cold front the next. Cedar and oak pollen seasons hit hard. Sudden rainstorms roll through. A sunroom built for this climate handles all of it without turning into a sauna or leaking when the rain comes. That’s why materials and installation quality matter more here than in milder climates.
Most sunroom installations take 4-8 weeks from start to finish depending on the size and complexity. Smaller projects move faster. Larger custom builds with electrical and HVAC work take longer.
The timeline includes permits, foundation work, framing, glass installation, and any mechanical systems you’re adding. Spring follows Texas building codes, and everything has to be inspected. We handle that process so you don’t have to chase down permits or deal with the city.
Weather can affect the schedule since part of the work happens outside. If we hit a stretch of heavy rain or extreme heat, things might slow down for a few days. We keep you updated throughout so you know what’s happening and when to expect the crew. Once it’s done, you’ll have a finished space that’s ready to use immediately—no waiting for paint to dry or floors to cure.
A 3-season sunroom works in mild weather—roughly March through May and September through November in Spring. A 4-season sunroom works year-round because it’s insulated and climate-controlled.
Three-season rooms use screens or single-pane glass with minimal insulation. They’re fine when temperatures are comfortable, but they’re too hot in summer and too cold in winter. You’re essentially paying for a space you can only use half the year.
Four-season sunrooms are built like real room additions. Insulated walls, double-pane energy-efficient glass, and HVAC integration keep the temperature comfortable no matter what’s happening outside. That means you can use the space in July when it’s 100 degrees and in January when a cold front drops temps into the 30s. If you’re investing in a sunroom in Texas, a 4-season build is the only one that makes sense unless you’re fine with a space that sits empty most of the year.
Yes. Any permanent structure attached to your home requires permits in Spring. That includes sunrooms, even if they’re not adding traditional square footage.
The permit process covers foundation work, structural framing, electrical, and HVAC if you’re tying into your home’s systems. Spring follows Texas building codes, and inspections happen at different stages to make sure everything is up to standard. Skipping permits might seem easier, but it creates problems when you sell—buyers’ lenders often require proof that additions were permitted and inspected.
We handle the permit process as part of the installation. We pull the permits, schedule inspections, and make sure everything passes. You don’t have to deal with the city or worry about whether the work is compliant. It’s all done correctly from the start so there are no issues down the road.
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