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 for another patio that sits empty from May through September. You want a room that stays cool when it’s 105 degrees outside and comfortable when January hits freezing.
That’s what a four-season sunroom does. Insulated glass keeps the heat out during Houston’s brutal summers. Thermal roofing means your AC isn’t fighting a losing battle. And when winter comes, passive solar heating cuts your energy costs instead of adding to them.
The result is simple: more usable square footage that doesn’t depend on perfect weather. You get a breakfast nook that works in August. A play area that’s comfortable in July. A space for family gatherings that doesn’t require everyone to sweat through dinner or crowd into your living room.
Gulfton sits in one of Houston’s hottest zones—up to 17 degrees hotter than other neighborhoods. A screen room won’t cut it here. You need real climate control, real insulation, and construction that’s built for the conditions you’re actually dealing with.
We’ve been in the sunroom business for almost five decades. We’re not new to Houston’s climate, and we’re not experimenting with materials that might hold up.
Every project uses CONSERVAGLASS™ NXT with stay-clean technology and energy-efficient properties. Hurricane-grade glass is standard—5/8-inch thick, rated up to Category 5. The construction process involves factory-certified contractors who handle electrical and HVAC work with proper state licensing.
Gulfton homeowners deal with extreme heat, sudden storms, and high energy costs. We’ve built sunrooms across the Houston area long enough to know what works and what fails. Our installations are designed around your home’s layout, your budget, and how you actually plan to use the space. No cookie-cutter designs. No overselling features you don’t need.
The process starts with an on-site consultation at your home. We measure the space, discuss what you’re looking for, and talk through design options that fit your property and budget. You’ll see material samples and get a clear breakdown of costs before anything moves forward.
Once the design is finalized, we handle permits and scheduling. The foundation work comes first—either a concrete slab or integration with your existing structure, depending on your home’s setup. Then the frame goes up, followed by the insulated glass panels and thermal roofing system.
Electrical and HVAC installation happens next if you’re adding climate control, which most Gulfton homeowners do given the heat. All of this is done by licensed contractors who specialize in their trade. You’re not getting a general handyman trying to wire your sunroom.
The final walkthrough covers how everything operates, what maintenance looks like, and what’s covered under warranty. Most projects wrap up in a few weeks, depending on size and customization. You’ll know the timeline upfront, and we stick to it.
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A four-season sunroom in Gulfton means full insulation, climate control capability, and materials rated for extreme weather. The glass is hurricane-proof and energy-efficient. The roofing includes thermal barriers that reduce heat transfer by 40-50%, which directly impacts your cooling costs during summer.
You’re getting a room that functions like the rest of your house, not an enclosed porch. That means proper HVAC integration, electrical outlets, and lighting. The space can handle furniture, electronics, and daily use without worrying about temperature swings or weather damage.
Financing options go up to $125,000 with competitive rates, and most projects see a return on investment between 55-75% in the Central Texas market. For Gulfton homeowners—where only 6.5% of housing units are owner-occupied—this kind of improvement adds serious value to your property while giving you immediate quality-of-life benefits.
The construction process is fully licensed and insured. We’re not cutting corners on permits or using subpar materials to hit a lower price point. You’re investing in a structure that will last decades, not a few years.
Most sunroom projects in the Houston area run between $36,000 and $54,000, depending on size and features. Texas pricing tends to be 15-25% lower than what you’d pay in California or Florida, so you’re getting better value per square foot here.
The cost breaks down into materials, labor, permits, and any HVAC or electrical work. A basic four-season sunroom with insulated glass and thermal roofing starts around $150 per square foot. Custom features like upgraded glass, additional climate control, or specialty finishes push that higher.
Financing is available up to $125,000 with unsecured loans, so you’re not required to put your home up as collateral. Most homeowners in Gulfton finance the project and see immediate energy savings that offset part of the monthly payment. We provide a detailed cost breakdown during the consultation so there’s no guessing about what you’re paying for.
Yes, if it’s built right. A four-season sunroom uses insulated glass and thermal roofing specifically designed to handle extreme heat. The glass blocks UV rays and reduces heat transfer, while the roofing system includes barriers that keep your space from turning into a greenhouse.
Gulfton is one of Houston’s hottest neighborhoods—up to 17 degrees hotter than other parts of the city. A screen room or three-season porch won’t work here. You need full climate control and materials rated for triple-digit temperatures.
Most homeowners add HVAC integration so the sunroom ties into their existing system. That means the space stays at the same temperature as the rest of your house, even in August. Energy-efficient glass also reduces your cooling costs by 40-50% compared to standard windows, so you’re not just adding comfort—you’re cutting expenses.
Most sunroom projects take three to six weeks from start to finish. The timeline depends on the size of the room, how much customization you’re adding, and whether you’re integrating HVAC or electrical systems.
Foundation work and framing happen first, usually within the first week. Then the glass panels and roofing go up, followed by any electrical or HVAC installation. The final phase covers finishing touches, walkthrough, and cleanup.
Weather can impact the schedule since some work happens outdoors, but we account for that in the timeline we give you upfront. You’ll know the expected completion date before we start, and we don’t drag projects out. Gulfton homeowners have enough to deal with—we’re not adding construction delays to the list.
Yes. Four-season sunrooms typically return 55-75% of their cost in added home value in the Central Texas market. That’s higher than the national average and reflects strong buyer demand for climate-controlled outdoor living spaces in hot climates.
In Gulfton, where only 6.5% of housing units are owner-occupied, property improvements carry extra weight. Buyers in this market are looking for homes that stand out, and a well-built sunroom does that. It adds functional square footage, reduces energy costs, and provides year-round usability that patios and decks can’t match.
Beyond resale value, you’re getting immediate use out of the space. Most homeowners recoup their investment through daily use and energy savings long before they sell. The ROI is just a bonus on top of the lifestyle improvement.
A patio enclosure typically uses screens or basic glass without insulation. It keeps bugs out and provides some weather protection, but it doesn’t control temperature. In Houston’s heat, that means the space is unusable for most of the year.
A four-season sunroom is a fully insulated, climate-controlled room. The glass is energy-efficient and hurricane-rated. The roofing includes thermal barriers. You can add HVAC, electrical outlets, and lighting. It functions like any other room in your house, not a seasonal add-on.
For Gulfton homeowners dealing with extreme heat, the difference matters. A patio enclosure might work in milder climates, but here you need real insulation and climate control. Otherwise, you’re building a space that sits empty from May through September—exactly what you’re trying to avoid.
Yes. We use 5/8-inch thick hurricane-grade glass rated up to Category 5 storms. The framing is engineered to meet Texas building codes for wind resistance, and the roofing system is designed to handle severe weather without leaking or failing.
Houston gets its share of storms, and Gulfton isn’t exempt. The construction process includes proper anchoring to your home’s foundation and reinforced attachment points that distribute wind load across the structure. This isn’t lightweight construction that might hold up—it’s built to the same standards as the rest of your house.
All work is fully licensed and insured, and we pull the necessary permits for structural additions. You’re getting a room that meets code requirements and can handle whatever weather Houston throws at it. That includes high winds, heavy rain, and the occasional freeze that catches everyone off guard.
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