
Gardena Sunrooms and Patios has served Gardena homeowners with sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and custom sunroom construction since 2020. We know Gardena's older housing stock, pull permits through the city, and reply within one business day.

Gardena's postwar homes often have small interior footprints but good-sized backyards that are underused because of afternoon sun and heat. A sunroom addition gives you a fully weatherproofed room that connects your home to the backyard without the glare or bugs, and we design every addition to match Gardena's older stucco-and-roofline architecture so it looks like it was always there.
Many Gardena homes already have a concrete slab patio against the back of the house, and enclosing that slab is often a faster and more affordable path to a new room than building from scratch. We assess your existing concrete to confirm it can support the new enclosure, and we handle all permits through the City of Gardena Building and Safety Division from start to finish.
Gardena lots are small and most homes sit close to their neighbors, so a custom sunroom designed around your specific yard layout and roofline delivers better results than a one-size-fits-all kit. We design around your actual sun exposure, setback requirements, and HOA guidelines if applicable, so the finished room fits your property and your life.
Gardena's mild winters mean you can realistically use a sunroom in every month of the year, but only if the room is properly insulated and connected to your home's heating and cooling system. A four-season room built with energy-efficient glass stays comfortable even on the hottest summer afternoons, when an underinsulated room can reach uncomfortable temperatures quickly.
Building a new sunroom on a Gardena property means dealing with clay-heavy soils that shift seasonally, older foundations that need careful assessment, and seismic anchoring requirements that California's building code mandates. Our crew builds to current code from the foundation up, and every project passes the required city inspections before we call it done.
A screen room is the right choice for Gardena homeowners who want to enjoy outdoor air and light without the insects and debris that come with fully open patios. It is also a simpler permitted project than a full sunroom addition, which keeps costs lower and timelines shorter, making it a practical starting point if you are not ready for a full enclosure.
The majority of Gardena's housing stock was built between the 1940s and 1970s, during the postwar suburban expansion of Southern California. These are one-story, wood-frame, stucco-clad homes on small lots - solid construction for their era, but now 55 to 80 years old. Any room addition on a home this age requires a proper structural review before work begins, because the existing foundation and framing need to be assessed for what they can support. A contractor who skips this step is setting you up for cost surprises mid-project.
Gardena's climate adds its own demands. The South Bay sun is intense year-round, and a sunroom built without proper heat-blocking glass will be uncomfortably hot by afternoon every summer. The rainy season, which runs from roughly November through March, brings the kind of heavy rain that finds any gap in flashing, caulking, or roof connections. And the clay-heavy soils common throughout the Los Angeles Basin shift with every wet season and dry season, which puts stress on concrete slabs and foundations over time. A sunroom contractor who has not worked in this area will not naturally account for these factors - one who has will build them into the design from the start.
Our crew has been working throughout Gardena since 2020, pulling permits through the City of Gardena Building and Safety Division and building on the kinds of properties that define this city: single-story stucco homes on 5,000- to 7,000-square-foot lots with small backyards and concrete driveways. We know how the permit process works here, how long reviews typically take, and what the inspectors are looking for at each stage. That familiarity saves time and prevents the back-and-forth that slows down contractors who are new to this municipality.
Gardena is a well-connected city in the South Bay, bounded by Torrance to the south, Hawthorne to the west, and Compton to the east. The 110 and 91 freeways run near the city, which means our crew can get to any street in Gardena quickly. We work on homes from the neighborhoods near Rowley Park to the streets along Vermont and Western Avenues. For homeowners in neighboring Lawndale to the north, we serve that city as well and are familiar with the same type of housing stock that defines this corner of Los Angeles County.
We reply within one business day to schedule a free site visit. You do not need to have a design in mind - just a general sense of what you want the room to do.
A member of our crew visits your property, checks your foundation and backyard layout, and gives you a realistic cost range and timeline - including permit lead time. There is no pressure and no obligation.
Once you sign a contract, we submit your permit application to the City of Gardena. We keep you updated on the review timeline and give you a confirmed start date once the permit is approved.
Our crew handles all phases from foundation to finishing. A city inspector reviews the work at required stages, and we walk you through the finished room before calling the project complete.
We serve all of Gardena, CA and reply within one business day. Free estimates, no pressure, and every project is fully permitted through the City of Gardena.
(213) 659-0398Gardena is a city of about 60,000 people in the South Bay area of Los Angeles County, covering just under 6 square miles of flat, fully built-out residential land. The city is known for its diverse, long-established community, with deep Japanese American, Latino, and Black roots going back generations. Most of Gardena's neighborhoods are made up of single-story, stucco-clad homes built during the postwar suburban boom of the 1940s through 1960s, with a smaller share of two- to four-unit apartment buildings mixed in. Lots are modest in size - typically 5,000 to 7,000 square feet - and homes sit close together, which is typical of the South Bay's older residential fabric.
Landmarks like Rowley Park, which features a lake and sports fields in the center of the city, and the Gardena Valley Japanese Cultural Institute anchor the community's character. The 110 and 91 freeways border the city and provide easy access to the broader LA area. Gardena sits between Torrance to the south, Hawthorne to the west, and Compton to the east, making it a central point in the South Bay. Homeowners throughout Gardena, from the streets near Vermont Avenue to the neighborhoods along Western Avenue, are well-positioned to benefit from sunroom additions that extend their living space outward without requiring a larger lot. Neighboring Compton shares the same housing era and property types, and we serve that community as well.
Enjoy your sunroom year-round with full insulation and climate control.
Learn MoreKeep pests out and fresh air in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreTurn your deck into a beautiful, weather-protected sunroom space.
Learn MoreFloor-to-ceiling glass solariums that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and protect your outdoor space.
Learn MoreCall us or submit your information today - we serve all of Gardena and respond within one business day. Get your free estimate before the busy season fills our schedule.