
Gardena's weather is beautiful almost every day of the year. A screen room gives you a comfortable, bug-free outdoor space without the cost of a full enclosure.

Screen room installation in Gardena means building an aluminum-framed outdoor living space fully enclosed with fine mesh screening, and most projects take two to five days of on-site construction once permits are in hand.
A screen room gives you the feel of being outside - fresh air, natural light, a view of your yard - without the bugs, direct glare, or wind. It is not heated or air-conditioned like a full sunroom, which also makes it significantly less expensive to build. In Gardena's mild climate, a screen room is genuinely usable for most of the year. If you want full climate control, our patio enclosures service may be a better fit.
We handle the permit process with the City of Gardena and build with aluminum framing and corrosion-resistant hardware chosen specifically for South Bay coastal conditions. The marine layer that rolls through Gardena from the coast is beautiful, but it is hard on materials that are not designed for it.
If you have a nice yard but rarely spend time out there because of bugs, afternoon glare, or the feeling of being too exposed, a screen room removes that barrier. Gardena's climate is ideal for outdoor living almost every day - if something is keeping you inside, this fixes it.
Even in Southern California, mosquitoes and gnats can be a nuisance near standing water or landscaping. If you find yourself retreating inside after a few minutes because of bugs, a screen room solves that problem completely without the need for sprays or candles.
If you already have a patio cover but still feel too exposed to wind, insects, or neighbors' sightlines, you are essentially halfway to a screen room already. Adding screen panels to an existing covered structure is often more affordable than a full build.
Many Gardena homes from the 1950s and 1960s have a plain concrete slab behind the house that has never been developed. If that slab is just sitting there, it may already be the foundation for a screen room - the hardest part of the job could already be done.
We handle everything from the initial slab assessment through final permit sign-off. The frame is aluminum - rust-resistant and low-maintenance - and the screening is chosen for durability in the South Bay's coastal conditions. Roofing options include aluminum panels and polycarbonate, depending on your preference for shade versus natural light. For homeowners who want to take the next step toward a fully enclosed room, our patio-to-sunroom conversion service covers that path as well.
If your existing slab needs repair or leveling before we can frame, we assess that during the estimate visit and include it in the written quote. No surprises mid-project. We also help homeowners with HOA requirements when their neighborhood requires architectural review before construction. And if you want to compare screen rooms against a more enclosed option, see our patio enclosures page for a side-by-side comparison.
Best for homes with a sound concrete patio that just needs framing, screening, and a roof.
For yards where no usable slab exists - we pour the foundation and build the room in one project.
For homeowners who already have a patio cover and want to add screens to the sides.
For larger or more complex layouts where standard sizing does not fit the space.
Gardena sits in the South Bay area of Los Angeles County, where average highs stay in the mid-60s to low 80s for most of the year and hard freezes essentially never happen. That means a screen room here is genuinely usable 10 to 11 months out of the year - far more than in most of the country. The investment is easier to justify when you can picture using the space on a Tuesday in February. Gardena's older housing stock - much of it built between the 1940s and 1970s - also means a lot of homes have plain concrete slabs out back that have never been turned into anything useful. A screen room changes that without a major renovation.
The morning marine layer that rolls through from the coast is part of what makes the South Bay so livable, but it is hard on materials not designed for it. We build with aluminum framing and corrosion-resistant hardware specifically for this environment. We serve homeowners across the area, including Lynwood and Compton. The Aluminum Association outlines why aluminum framing is the standard choice for coastal outdoor structures - lightweight, rust-proof, and built to last.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form. We will follow up within one business day and ask a few basic questions about your yard, your existing slab, and what you want to use the space for.
We visit your home, measure the space, look at the existing slab or deck, and walk you through your options. You will leave the meeting with a clear sense of what the project involves and a written estimate to review.
We handle the permit application with the City of Gardena on your behalf. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help you prepare the materials needed for architectural review. This stage typically takes two to four weeks.
Most installations take two to five days on-site. When the work is done, we walk through the finished room with you, show you how the screen doors work, and hand over your permit sign-off documents.
Free estimate, no obligation. We reply within one business day.
(213) 659-0398We use aluminum framing and corrosion-resistant fasteners on every project because the South Bay's marine layer is hard on lower-quality materials. A screen room that starts rusting within a few years is not a good investment - ours are built to hold up for decades.
The City of Gardena requires a permit for screen room additions, and some neighborhoods also require HOA architectural review. We handle both processes, coordinate the city inspections, and hand you the final permit documentation when the work is done.
Many Gardena homes have older concrete slabs that look fine but may have shifted or cracked over the decades. We assess the slab during the estimate visit and tell you whether it needs repair before we build - not after the crew has already arrived.
You receive a written estimate covering every line item before we schedule a start date. The final price matches the quote. If you want to compare options - screen room versus patio enclosure, for example - we walk you through the trade-offs clearly.
A screen room is only worth the investment if it is built right - tight screening, plumb framing, and materials that hold up to the coastal air. We take the time to do it correctly because we want you using the room 10 years from now, not calling someone to fix it. Verify any contractor you hire through the California Contractors State License Board before signing anything.
Turn a plain concrete patio into a fully enclosed sunroom rather than a screened space.
Learn MoreEnclose your patio with solid walls and windows for year-round climate control.
Learn MoreThe permit process in Gardena takes a few weeks - the sooner you reach out, the sooner you are enjoying your new outdoor room.