
College Station Sunrooms & Patios serves College Station homeowners with sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms designed for Brazos Valley heat and clay soil. We have served this area since 2019 and we know what makes College Station homes different.

College Station homeowners who want more living space without moving choose sunroom additions to turn underused backyard space into a year-round room. Because summer heat here runs from May through September, every addition we build is designed to stay cool without overworking your HVAC.
College Station weather cycles from 97-degree summers to occasional hard freezes, and a fully insulated four season sunroom handles both extremes. These rooms connect to your home's HVAC and use low-emissivity glass to block solar heat, so the space earns its cost across all twelve months rather than just the mild weeks in spring and fall.
Many College Station homes have open concrete patios that sit unused for months because of heat, bugs, and afternoon thunderstorms. Enclosing that slab converts existing square footage into a sheltered room without the cost of pouring a new foundation, and it gives you back months of outdoor living you would otherwise skip.
For homeowners who want fresh air and bug protection without full climate control, a screened room is the right starting point. College Station spring evenings from March through May are genuinely pleasant, and a well-built screen room lets you use that outdoor window comfortably without mosquitoes ruining the experience.
Homes in established College Station neighborhoods like Pebble Creek and Castlegate have distinct layouts and HOA requirements that standard kits cannot always match. Custom builds let us design around your specific floor plan, setbacks, and HOA rules so the finished room looks like it was always part of the house.
Older sunrooms in College Station often show the effects of years of intense UV exposure, including faded frames, cracked seals, and glass that no longer blocks heat effectively. Remodeling an existing room with updated glass and weatherstripping restores comfort and cuts down on cooling costs without the expense of a full teardown and rebuild.
College Station sits in a humid subtropical climate where summer high temperatures regularly reach 95 to 98 degrees and the sun beats down for eight or more months of the year. That combination of heat and UV exposure means the materials used in any sunroom or outdoor enclosure need to be specifically selected for this environment. Standard glass panels that work fine in milder climates turn a room into an oven here. Every College Station sunroom job requires low-emissivity glass, tight sealing, and a plan for connecting the room to the home's existing cooling system.
The soil under most College Station homes is Brazos County clay, which swells significantly when it rains and shrinks hard during dry spells. That constant movement stresses concrete slabs, and a foundation designed without local soil conditions in mind can crack or pull away from the main house within a few years. Spring storm season brings its own demands: about 40 inches of rain fall annually here, often in fast, heavy bursts that test every seal and flashing joint on an outdoor structure. A contractor who works in this area regularly understands these conditions, a contractor who does not may not find out until after you have already signed off on the project.
Our crew pulls permits regularly from the City of College Station Development Services office, and we know the typical review timeline and what the inspectors look for at each stage. That familiarity keeps projects moving without unnecessary delays at the permitting desk. We also work regularly in HOA-governed neighborhoods including Pebble Creek, Castlegate, and Southwood Valley, so we know how to prepare the submittals those communities require.
College Station is a city with two very different housing worlds. Near the Texas A&M campus and the Northgate district, you find older homes on smaller lots with limited backyard space, where creative placement matters. Out toward William D. Fitch Parkway and the south side of town, the newer subdivisions have larger lots, newer brick veneer construction, and homeowners who are investing in long-term improvements. We work across all of these neighborhoods and understand that a design that fits one part of town may not suit another.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Bryan, TX, where the older housing stock and similar Brazos County clay conditions create comparable project considerations. Whether you are on the College Station side of the twin cities or the Bryan side, the same soil and climate factors apply.
Reach out by phone or the contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We schedule a free on-site visit to measure your space, look at your yard conditions, and talk through what you want from the room.
During the visit we check your soil conditions, existing slab or patio, setbacks from property lines, and any HOA requirements. You receive a written estimate that details the work, materials, and timeline - no surprises after you sign.
We submit plans to the City of College Station Development Services office and handle any HOA submittals your neighborhood requires. The city review typically takes two to four weeks, and we will notify you the day permits are approved.
Foundation, framing, glass, and finishing happen in sequence with city inspections built into the schedule. We walk you through the finished room before we leave and address any punch-list items on the spot.
We serve College Station and the entire Brazos Valley. Tell us what you have in mind and we will get back to you within one business day with a plan.
(979) 921-8165College Station is a city of roughly 120,000 residents in Brazos County, about 100 miles northwest of Houston, and its identity is shaped almost entirely by Texas A&M University, one of the largest universities in the United States. The city has a clear split between neighborhoods close to campus - where older homes and a mix of rental and owner-occupied properties are the norm - and newer suburban neighborhoods like Pebble Creek, Castlegate, and Southwood Valley, where larger single-family homes sit on quarter-acre to half-acre lots. Homes in these established suburban areas were mostly built between 1985 and 2010, with brick veneer as the dominant exterior material, and homeowners here tend to invest steadily in upkeep and improvements.
College Station shares a border with Bryan, TX, and the two cities together form the Bryan-College Station metro area of more than 270,000 people. Kyle Field, the Texas A&M football stadium that holds over 102,000 fans, sits on the western edge of campus and serves as the city's most recognizable landmark. The Northgate district just north of campus is the well-known commercial strip where local bars and restaurants cluster. Major streets like Texas Avenue, University Drive, and William D. Fitch Parkway divide the city into distinct zones, and our crew works across all of them. We also regularly travel to areas around College Station including Hearne and surrounding communities when homeowners reach out.
Expert construction delivering durable, well-built sunrooms from the ground up.
Learn MoreRefresh and modernize your existing sunroom with professional remodeling.
Learn MoreKeep bugs out while enjoying fresh air in a screened outdoor room.
Learn MoreTurn your deck into a comfortable, year-round enclosed living space.
Learn MoreSpots fill up fast in spring and fall - reach out today and we will have your estimate ready within one business day.