Stop letting insects, Santa Ana dust, and debris chase you inside. A properly installed screen room gives you a fully enclosed outdoor living space you can use every evening, all year long.

Screen room installation in Glendale, CA creates a fully enclosed outdoor living space with mesh screening on the walls and often the ceiling - keeping out bugs, leaves, and debris while letting fresh air flow through freely. Most installations take three to seven business days of active construction after the building permit is approved.
A screen room is not a sunroom with solid walls and insulated glass - it is the right choice when you want fresh air and outdoor connection without the cost of a fully enclosed addition. If your patio already has a roof or pergola overhead, the structure is often partially there, and a screen room converts that underused covered space into a room you actually want to spend time in. For homeowners who want full weather and temperature control, we can walk you through our patio enclosure options as a comparison.
Glendale enjoys roughly 280 sunny days per year, with mild winters that make a screen room usable almost every month. That kind of climate is exactly what a screen room is built for - and it means the investment pays off in daily use, not just a few weeks a year.
If you head inside as soon as the sun goes down because mosquitoes or other insects make the patio uncomfortable, a screen room solves that problem directly. Glendale's warm evenings from late spring through early fall are prime outdoor living time, and insects are the most common reason homeowners stop using them. A screen room lets you stay outside comfortably without sprays or citronella candles.
If you spend time every fall cleaning a thick layer of dust, leaves, and debris off your outdoor furniture after wind events, that is a sign your patio needs enclosure. Santa Ana winds carry fine particulate matter from the surrounding hillsides and can leave a visible film on everything in an open patio within hours. A screen room keeps that debris out while still letting air circulate freely.
If you have an existing covered patio - a concrete slab with a roof or pergola overhead - but you rarely use it because it feels too exposed, a screen room is the natural next step. Many Glendale homes built in the mid-century era have exactly this kind of underused covered patio. Adding screens converts a pass-through space into a room you actually want to spend time in.
If your home feels cramped but a full addition is not in the budget, a screen room gives you a usable, comfortable space at a fraction of the cost of adding a room with walls and insulation. In Glendale's real estate market, where square footage is expensive, a screen room is one of the more affordable ways to expand how your home feels day to day.
We install screen rooms using aluminum framing - the industry standard for Southern California because it does not rot, does not rust, and does not need painting. We offer standard fiberglass mesh for homeowners who want maximum airflow and visibility, and solar screen mesh for rooms that face west or south and get intense afternoon sun. Every installation includes the permit application, required city inspection, and a final walkthrough. If your existing slab needs repair or replacement before framing can begin, we handle that assessment and give you options before any work starts. For homeowners considering a step up to solid walls and glass panels, we can walk you through our patio-to-sunroom conversion service as a next-level option.
We also design and build screen rooms from scratch for homes that do not have an existing covered patio to work from - we handle the slab pour, framing, and screening start to finish. Like all our work, every new-construction screen room goes through the full patio enclosure permitting process so your finished structure is legal and documented.
Suits homeowners who want a durable, low-maintenance structure that holds up to Glendale's heat and seasonal Santa Ana winds.
Suits rooms with west or south-facing sun exposure where standard mesh lets in too much heat and glare during summer afternoons.
Suits homes with a concrete slab and pergola or patio cover already in place - we assess the slab and add the framing and screens.
Suits homes without an existing patio structure where we build everything - slab, frame, and screening - from the ground up.
Glendale's climate is one of the best arguments for a screen room you will find anywhere. With roughly 280 sunny days a year and mild winters that rarely require a heater, this is a city where outdoor living is genuinely possible eleven months a year - if your patio is set up for it. The problem for most Glendale homeowners is not the weather, it is the bugs in summer and the Santa Ana wind debris every fall. A well-built screen room with the right mesh and properly reinforced framing addresses both. Neighborhoods like Verdugo Woodlands and Montecito Park, where many homes have covered patios built in the mid-century era, are full of properties that are ideal candidates for this kind of enclosure.
Glendale's permit requirements apply to screen room additions, and the Community Development Department enforces them consistently. A contractor familiar with Glendale's process submits complete plans the first time - which keeps the review moving rather than getting sent back for corrections. Homeowners in Glendale and nearby Burbank work with us because we know both permit offices and handle HOA design review submissions when required. For guidance on what building permits cover, the City of Glendale Community Development Department is the authoritative source.
We respond within one business day. We ask a few questions about your patio space, your existing slab, and how you plan to use the room, then schedule a time to come see it in person. No honest estimate gets made over the phone.
We measure your space, assess the existing slab condition, and note anything that affects the scope - like whether a new concrete pour is needed or whether your HOA has design requirements. You receive a written estimate within one to two weeks that breaks down every cost clearly.
Once you sign the contract, we submit the permit application to Glendale's Community Development Department and handle any HOA design submissions at the same time. Plan for two to four weeks of permit review before framing begins. We keep you updated on where things stand.
Active construction runs three to seven business days on your property. After the city inspector signs off, we walk you through the finished room - how the door latches work, what the screening is rated for, and how to care for it. You receive a copy of the final permit sign-off for your records.
No commitment required. We come out, measure, and give you a written quote - then you decide.
(747) 609-3881We use heavier-gauge framing hardware, reinforced screen channels, and door latches rated for the high-wind conditions Glendale's foothills and canyon areas experience every fall. A screen room that blows out during the first Santa Ana is not a screen room - it is an expensive repair. We build to hold up to this specific climate.
We submit complete, accurate drawings to Glendale's Community Development Department the first time - which means fewer back-and-forth delays during the plan check process. Your project stays on schedule and your finished room is fully documented. Contractor licensing can be verified through the California Contractors State License Board.
Older Glendale homes - especially those built before 1970 - often have concrete slabs that are cracked, sloped, or too thin to support a new screen room structure. We assess your slab on the first visit and tell you whether it works as-is or whether a new pour is needed. You know the full cost before you sign anything.
Many Glendale neighborhoods - including Verdugo Woodlands, Montecito Park, and Chevy Chase Canyon - have active HOAs with their own design review requirements. We ask about HOA status at the first meeting and help you prepare the submission so it does not add unexpected weeks to your timeline.
A screen room is one of the more straightforward outdoor living projects you can do - but only if the contractor builds it correctly for this climate. Glendale's wind events, permit requirements, and older slab conditions make local experience genuinely matter here, and that is what we bring.
For homeowners who want to step up from a screen enclosure to solid walls and glass panels with full weather protection.
Learn MoreA more substantial enclosure option that adds solid framing and glass panels for homeowners who want more than screening can offer.
Learn MoreThe sooner we submit the permit application, the sooner construction can begin. Call today or request a free written estimate online.