
Your existing patio is already most of the way there. We enclose it into a protected, comfortable room you can actually use year-round - no bugs, no heat, no afternoon downpours chasing you inside.

Patio enclosures in College Station turn your existing outdoor patio into a protected room with walls, windows, a roof structure, and optional heating or cooling - most construction takes one to three weeks once permits are approved, with total project timelines of four to eight weeks.
Unlike starting from scratch, a patio enclosure works with what you already have. If your patio has a solid slab and is positioned well on your lot, the enclosure goes up faster and at lower cost than a full addition. The key is making sure the existing slab is in good enough shape to build on - College Station's clay soils can crack concrete over time, and that needs to be addressed before any walls go up.
Homeowners looking at a more comprehensive upgrade should also consider a custom sunroom if they want the room to feel fully integrated with the house, or enclosed patio rooms for a climate-controlled option with full insulation.
If your outdoor space becomes a no-go zone by the time College Station's real heat arrives - usually mid-April through September - an enclosure with proper cooling turns that wasted space into a room you live in. Finding yourself eating dinner inside every night because the patio is too hot is the clearest sign.
College Station's combination of intense UV exposure and high humidity is hard on outdoor furniture and finishes. If you are replacing cushions, repainting furniture, or watching wood warp every couple of years, an enclosure would protect your investment and reduce ongoing maintenance costs.
The Brazos Valley's warm, humid climate creates ideal conditions for mosquitoes and biting insects for much of the year. If you cannot sit outside after 6 p.m. without getting bitten, even a screened enclosure would transform how you use that space.
If you notice cracks across your patio slab or sections that have shifted relative to each other, College Station's clay soils are likely the cause. This is worth addressing before building an enclosure on top - a contractor who spots this during a site visit is doing you a favor, not upselling you.
We build patio enclosures across the full range - from basic screened-in structures to fully insulated, climate-controlled rooms. The right option depends on your budget, how many months per year you plan to use the space, and whether cooling is a priority from day one. For most College Station homeowners, it should be. We can also pair a patio enclosure with a custom sunroom design if you want the finished room to blend seamlessly with your home's exterior, or explore enclosed patio rooms if full climate control is the goal.
Every enclosure we build starts with an honest assessment of your existing slab - its condition, drainage, and how the soil underneath may be moving. That foundation check is not optional here. We also assess your roof structure, check HOA requirements if applicable, and give you a written estimate that spells out exactly what is included before any work begins.
Suits homeowners who want maximum airflow and insect protection without a large budget - ideal for spring and fall use.
Suits homeowners who want year-round weather protection and a polished look at a moderate price point.
Suits homeowners who want the room fully comfortable in College Station's summer heat, with a dedicated mini-split cooling system.
Suits homeowners who already have a covered patio and want to add walls and panels without building a new roof structure.
College Station sits in the Brazos Valley, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 95 degrees and the combination of heat and humidity makes an unprotected patio feel oppressive from May through September. Any enclosure you build here needs to address heat gain through the roof and windows from the design stage - not as an afterthought. Homeowners in neighborhoods like Castlegate and College Station near the Texas A&M campus have learned this the hard way, investing in enclosures that look great but become unusable by late spring.
There are also structural factors specific to this area. College Station's Vertisol clay soils swell and shrink with every rain and dry cycle, which can shift and crack a patio slab over time. If your existing slab has moved, enclosing it without addressing that first will transfer the problem into your new room. Spring also brings significant thunderstorm activity and occasional hail across the Brazos Valley, so the roof and window glazing choices for your enclosure need to be made with weather resistance in mind. Homeowners near Bryan and other parts of the metro area face the same conditions, and we serve the whole region with the same level of attention to local site conditions.
We ask about your patio size, slab condition, and what you want the space to become. You will hear back within one business day - no obligation to move forward.
We visit your home, measure the space, assess your existing slab and roof structure, and walk through your options. A written estimate follows within a few days - every line item spelled out, no vague add-ons.
We apply for the City of College Station building permit before any work begins. If your neighborhood has an HOA with architectural review requirements, we help you prepare the submission. Both processes run in parallel to avoid delays.
Once permits are in hand, construction typically takes one to three weeks. The city inspects the finished work before the permit closes out. We walk through the room with you at completion and provide any warranty documentation in writing.
We assess your existing slab, handle permits, and give you a written estimate - no obligation, no sales pitch.
(979) 921-8165We apply for and manage the City of College Station building permit before any work begins. That means a city inspector independently verifies our work is correct - giving you documented proof at resale and protecting you from contractors who skip this step.
College Station's clay soils shift with every wet and dry cycle, and we check your existing slab for cracking and movement before a single wall goes up. Addressing foundation issues first means your new enclosure stays level and crack-free.
Most patio enclosures in College Station need a dedicated cooling solution to be usable through summer. We discuss mini-split options and glazing choices with you during the estimate phase - not after construction is finished and the room is already a greenhouse.
Many College Station neighborhoods require written HOA architectural approval before any exterior modification begins. We walk homeowners through that submission process routinely, so your project does not hit a last-minute delay over paperwork.
Patio enclosure work in College Station requires knowing the local soil conditions, the city permit process, and how to build for real Texas heat. We bring all three to every project. The U.S. Department of Energy recommends ductless mini-split systems as the most efficient way to cool an addition like this independently from your home's main HVAC - we size and plan for these from the design stage.
A fully designed sunroom built to match your home's architecture and your specific layout, for a result that looks original to the house.
Learn MoreA fully insulated, climate-controlled version of a patio enclosure for homeowners who want the room usable even in peak College Station heat.
Learn MoreReach out now and we will assess your patio, handle the permits, and have your estimate ready before the rush season begins.