
Your patio slab is already there. We enclose it with walls, a proper roof, and the right windows so it becomes a room your family actually uses - in summer, during fire season, and on every comfortable day in between.

Enclosed patio rooms in Murrieta convert an existing outdoor patio into a fully covered, walled room attached to your home - adding a solid or glass roof, windows or sliding panels, and a finished floor. Most projects run six to ten weeks from start to finish, with active construction taking two to four weeks after permits clear.
The main advantage over a ground-up sunroom addition is that your existing slab does the foundation work for you, which keeps costs and timelines lower. The majority of Murrieta's homes were built between the 1990s and 2010s with concrete patios already in place, and most of those slabs are in solid enough condition to build on. Enclosed patio rooms in Murrieta work well as playrooms, home offices, casual dining spaces, or anywhere your family needs more room without the disruption of a full addition.
If you want the full insulation, HVAC integration, and construction standard of a new room addition, compare this with our solarium installation or our broader patio enclosures options, which cover everything from basic screen systems to full glass conversions.
If your outdoor patio sits unused for three or four months every summer because Murrieta's heat makes it uncomfortable, an enclosed room with a proper insulated roof and ventilation can change that. The goal is a space you use year-round, not one you write off from June through September. If you are skipping the patio entirely during summer, this conversion is one of the most direct solutions.
Murrieta's dry, windy conditions - especially during Santa Ana wind events - mean open patios collect dust, pollen, and debris faster than most homeowners expect. If you are sweeping or hosing down the patio constantly just to make it usable, enclosing it solves the problem at the source. A sealed room stays clean between uses and protects everything inside from the elements.
If cushions, rugs, and patio furniture are showing UV damage or weather deterioration within a year or two of purchase, the space is getting more sun and weather exposure than most materials can handle. Enclosing with a solid or tinted roof dramatically reduces UV exposure and extends the life of everything in the room. This is a common frustration for Murrieta homeowners given the area's high sun intensity.
If your family needs more room but a full home addition feels like too much cost and disruption, your existing patio may be the answer. Enclosing it is typically faster, less invasive, and less expensive than building from scratch. Many Murrieta homeowners use the finished room as a flex space - a playroom one year, a home office the next - as the family's needs change.
We start every project by inspecting the existing patio slab for cracks, settling, or any signs of the soil movement common in Murrieta's clay-heavy ground. If the slab checks out, we frame walls directly on it, install the roof system you choose - insulated solid, polycarbonate, or glass - and fit windows or sliding glass panels. Electrical work for lighting, fans, and outlets is included. Some homeowners add a wall-mounted cooling unit to handle Murrieta's summers; we discuss that option during the estimate and size it correctly for the room.
Homeowners who want maximum natural light and a glass-ceiling feel can step up to a solarium installation, which uses a structural glass roof to bring sky exposure into the room. For homeowners whose goal is simply to keep bugs and debris out without full enclosure, our patio enclosures options include screen systems and partial glass solutions at a lower investment.
Best for homeowners who prioritize heat reduction and weather protection over natural light from above.
Best for homeowners who want a bright, light-filled room and are willing to add ventilation or cooling to manage heat gain.
Best for homeowners who want the option to open the room to the outdoors on mild days while keeping it fully sealed in bad weather.
Best for homeowners in Murrieta who want the room to be genuinely usable in summer, with a wall-mounted mini-split sized for the space.
Murrieta's housing stock - mostly built between the 1990s and 2010s - comes with concrete patio slabs that were poured as part of the original construction. Those slabs are typically in good shape and suitable for enclosure, which is a genuine advantage. It means most projects do not require new foundation work, which keeps costs and timelines lower than markets where patios are more varied. And Murrieta's climate adds a real use case that goes beyond aesthetics: an enclosed room with sealed windows gives you a comfortable outdoor-feeling space during wildfire smoke events and Santa Ana wind season, when air quality or gusting conditions make an open patio unpleasant.
HOA rules affect a large share of Murrieta neighborhoods, including planned communities in Greer Ranch, Spencer's Crossing, and Copper Canyon. Most of these HOAs require written architectural approval before any exterior construction begins, separate from the city permit. We have completed enclosed patio projects in these neighborhoods and know what each HOA submission typically requires to get approved without back-and-forth.
We serve homeowners throughout the area, including Canyon Lake to the north and Temecula to the south. If you are not sure whether your patio is a good candidate for enclosure, call us and we will give you an honest answer during a free site visit.
Reach out and we respond within one business day. We ask a few basic questions - patio size, HOA status, intended use - then schedule an in-person visit to measure the space, inspect the slab, and walk through your options before quoting.
If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help prepare the submission for architectural review at the same time we file with the City of Murrieta's Building and Safety Division. Plan for two to four weeks of permit review before construction begins.
The crew works primarily in the patio area, so your indoor living space stays undisturbed. Framing goes up first, followed by the roof system, then windows and doors, then any electrical work. Most projects take two to four weeks of active construction.
Once construction is complete, we schedule the city inspector's final visit. After it passes, we walk through the finished room with you - checking every window and door - and address any punch-list items before closing out the job.
We handle permits, HOA paperwork, and construction from start to finish. Call us or request a free estimate and we will respond within one business day.
(951) 574-0064We inspect your existing concrete during the free estimate visit and tell you honestly whether it is suitable for enclosure or whether any repairs are needed first. Most Murrieta patios from the 1990s-2010s era pass this check, but it is better to know before you sign a contract than to find out mid-project.
We discuss roof options in terms of what they actually do in Murrieta's heat - not just how they look. A solid insulated roof reduces heat gain dramatically compared to a clear polycarbonate panel, and we explain that tradeoff clearly so you make the right choice for your situation.
We file with the City of Murrieta's Building and Safety Division and prepare your HOA submission at the same time, so the two processes run concurrently rather than sequentially. That keeps your timeline as short as possible without cutting corners on either approval.
Before signing anything with any contractor, you can look up their license status on the California Contractors State License Board website in under two minutes. We carry a current California contractor license, general liability insurance, and workers compensation - and we are happy to show proof before you commit.
Every enclosed patio room we build in Murrieta goes through the city permit process and gets a final city inspection before we close out the job. That is the standard, not an upgrade - and it is what protects your investment when you go to sell.
Maximize natural light with a glass-ceiling solarium that brings the sky indoors.
Learn MoreScreen or glass patio enclosures that block bugs and weather without a full room conversion.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Murrieta mean starting sooner gets you finished sooner - call us today and we will get your project moving.