
Your patio already has a foundation. We enclose it into a protected, usable room - screened, three-season, or fully climate-controlled for Tulare's summer heat. Fully permitted, no surprises.

Patio enclosures in Tulare turn an existing outdoor patio into a protected room - ranging from a basic screen room to a fully insulated, climate-controlled addition - and most projects take six to ten weeks from contract to completion including permit review.
The type of enclosure you choose determines whether the space is usable during Tulare's summer heat. A screened or lightly glazed custom sunroom works well in spring and fall but will be uncomfortable in July and August without insulation and cooling. Many Tulare homeowners choose a four-season option specifically because the summer here is too long to write off four months of the year.
If your home is in one of Tulare's newer subdivisions, your HOA may have rules about exterior additions - that is always worth checking before you sign a contract. A good contractor will ask about it on the first call.
If you walk past your backyard furniture all summer without sitting down because it is simply too hot, that is a clear sign your outdoor space is not working for you. In Tulare, where triple-digit summer days are the norm, this is the most common reason homeowners decide to enclose their patio.
Tulare's agricultural surroundings mean gnats, flies, and fine dust are a real presence in backyards, especially during harvest season. If you find yourself going inside rather than sitting outside because of insects or blowing dust, a screened or glass-enclosed patio solves that without major construction.
If the patio cover attached to your home has visible rust, cracked panels, or gaps where it meets the exterior wall, it is already failing. Rather than patching an aging structure, many homeowners find it makes more sense to replace it with a properly permitted enclosure that adds real value.
If you have been thinking about a home office, a playroom, a workout space, or a place to host family dinners without crowding the kitchen, a patio enclosure can deliver that without the cost or disruption of a full home addition.
We build three levels of patio enclosure depending on your climate goals and budget. Homeowners who want insect and weather protection without climate control start with a screened or three-season enclosure. Those who want genuine year-round use in Tulare's extreme heat go with a fully insulated, four-season option. We also handle enclosed patio rooms when a homeowner wants the space to function and feel like a true interior room - finished floor, proper lighting, and a connection to the home's HVAC.
Every project starts with an assessment of your existing patio slab to determine whether it can be reused as the foundation - which can save you a meaningful amount compared to pouring new concrete. Learn more about your options from the This Old House home addition guide, which covers what differentiates enclosure types.
The most affordable option - keeps insects and debris out while keeping the open-air feel. Best for mild-weather use.
Glazed panels and a solid roof give you weather protection from February through November in Tulare's mild winters.
Fully insulated and connected to your home's cooling system - the only option that is genuinely usable during Tulare summers.
Most Tulare homes from the 1950s through 1990s have existing patios we can build directly on, reducing your overall cost.
Tulare's extreme summer heat - with temperatures regularly exceeding 100 degrees from June through September - means that an unprotected, unshaded patio is genuinely unusable for months. A properly climate-controlled enclosure changes that equation entirely: it becomes a room you can sit in, eat in, and gather in even when it is 105 degrees outside. At the same time, Tulare's mostly flat lots and post-war housing stock mean most backyards already have a concrete slab that can serve as the enclosure foundation - which gives you a meaningful cost advantage compared to a ground-up addition. Newer Tulare subdivisions on the north and east sides of town often have HOA rules, so it is worth checking your governing documents before finalizing any design.
We serve homeowners across the area, including Lindsay and Hanford. The climate conditions and single-family housing patterns in those communities are similar to Tulare - and patio enclosures consistently rank as one of the most practical home improvements you can make in this part of the Central Valley.
We ask about the size of your patio, what you are hoping to use the space for, and whether you have any existing cover or structure already in place. You do not need all the answers ready - just describe what you want the space to do. We respond within 1 business day.
We come to your home, measure the patio, and look at how it connects to your house. We walk through options that fit your space, climate needs, and budget - and flag anything that might affect the project, like an older slab or a complex roofline.
Once you agree on a design and sign a contract, we submit plans to the City of Tulare Building Division for review. This step takes two to four weeks on average. We handle all the paperwork - you do not need to deal with city hall.
The crew preps the slab, frames the walls and roof, installs windows and doors, and completes electrical work before closing walls. A city inspector visits at key stages. When work is done, we walk through every detail with you before calling the job complete.
We visit your home, assess your existing slab, and give you a written quote before you commit to anything. No pressure, no obligation.
(559) 837-6841We build everything from basic screen rooms to fully insulated, climate-controlled enclosures. For Tulare homeowners who want a space usable in July and August, we specify insulated glass and properly sized cooling - not just whatever is cheapest to install.
We pull every permit, manage the plan review process, and coordinate city inspections from start to finish. The finished work is documented and legally part of your home - which matters when you sell or file an insurance claim.
Many Tulare homes built between the 1950s and 1990s have existing concrete patios that are suitable as an enclosure foundation. We tell you honestly whether yours qualifies - reusing a sound slab saves you real money and we will not recommend a new pour if one is not needed.
A poorly designed enclosure sticks out and can actually hurt your home's value. We match your existing roofline, exterior material, and overall style so the finished room looks like it was always part of the house.
A permitted, well-built patio enclosure adds usable space that looks like it belongs to your home - and that is documentable when you sell. You can verify any contractor you consider through the California Contractors State License Board before signing anything.
If your patio layout or roofline needs a one-of-a-kind solution, a custom sunroom build starts from your specific site conditions.
Learn MoreA finished, fully enclosed patio room treated as permanent square footage - ideal for homeowners who want the space to function like an interior room.
Learn MoreSpring and fall booking slots fill fast - lock in your start date now before the best weather window for construction closes.