
A four season sunroom is the only kind that makes sense in Southeast Texas. Fully insulated, climate-controlled, and built to handle the heat, humidity, and storms that come with living on the Gulf Coast.

Four season sunrooms in Beaumont, TX are fully enclosed room additions with insulated walls and double- or triple-pane windows, connected to your home's heating and cooling system so you can use the space comfortably in any weather. Most projects run eight to fourteen weeks from contract to completion, including two to four weeks for permit approval.
The key word is "four season." Beaumont's summers are long and punishing - heat indexes above 105 degrees, humidity that rarely drops, and a stretch of days above 90 that runs from late May into early October. A room without proper insulation and a real cooling solution is essentially a sauna for half the year. A four season sunroom changes that, giving you a light-filled space that works in July just as well as it works in November. If you are comparing options, a three season sunroom costs less upfront but is not practical for Beaumont's summer months.
When you walk into a well-built four season sunroom, it does not feel like an add-on. It feels like a room that has always been there - because the framing, insulation, and glazing are all designed to match how the rest of your house works. That is what separates a properly built four season room from a basic prefabricated kit.
If you have a porch, patio, or backyard you enjoy in October but avoid from May through September, a four season sunroom gives that space back year-round. Beaumont's stretch of days above 90 degrees is long - a screened porch or open patio simply is not a livable option for most of the year here.
If you have an older sunroom, enclosed porch, or three-season room and you are seeing water stains, musty smells, or mold, that space is not sealed properly for Beaumont's humidity. A four season sunroom built to current standards uses materials that resist moisture intrusion far better than older construction - and addressing it protects the rest of your home.
If your family has outgrown your home but a full interior addition means months of internal demolition and reconfigured floor plans, a four season sunroom is often a faster and less disruptive path. It adds real square footage - an office, a playroom, an entertainment space - without touching your existing layout.
Buyers in Southeast Texas understand the climate and look for homes with comfortable, usable indoor-outdoor spaces. A properly permitted four season sunroom is a real differentiator in this market. An unpermitted sunroom, on the other hand, can complicate a sale - lenders and inspectors will flag it.
We build four season sunrooms as full room additions - not kit installs. Every project includes an on-site foundation assessment (Beaumont's clay soil makes this non-negotiable), permit filing with the City of Beaumont, framing designed to meet local wind-load requirements, insulated low-e glass, and a cooling solution sized for the room's actual solar load. We work through the full scope, from the foundation slab through finished flooring and trim.
For homeowners who want to extend the room's size or combine it with outdoor coverage, we also handle all season room designs that connect interior and exterior spaces. Every build is permitted and inspected - no exceptions - because your investment should be documentable when you sell. The ENERGY STAR window certification program gives you a way to independently verify the efficiency of the glass products we use.
Custom-framed, insulated, and climate-controlled - built to function as a true year-round living space in Southeast Texas heat.
A dedicated wall-mounted unit sized for the sunroom's specific load, so the new room does not strain your existing system.
Window and roof panel systems selected to meet Beaumont's wind-load code requirements - not standard residential glass.
Jefferson County sits in one of the most demanding climates for any type of construction. The heat and humidity are extreme from May through September, the clay soil moves constantly, and the Gulf Coast location means every structure needs to be able to take a hit from a tropical system. After Hurricane Harvey hit this region in 2017, homeowners here have good reason to want any addition built to the strongest local standards. We frame and anchor every sunroom to meet Beaumont's wind-load requirements - not as an upgrade, but as the baseline.
Parts of Beaumont also sit in FEMA-designated flood zones. If your property is in or near one of those areas, the foundation design for any addition needs to account for base flood elevation requirements. We check this early in the planning process so there are no surprises after you have already committed. Homeowners in Silsbee and Orange face similar conditions and we serve those areas as well.
Call or submit the contact form and someone from our office will respond within one business day. We ask a few questions about the space you have in mind and how you plan to use the room. You do not need to have every detail figured out before you call.
A contractor visits your home to measure the space, assess the soil and slab conditions, and check how your existing roofline will interact with the new room. In Beaumont, we also ask about your property's flood zone status. After the visit, you get a written estimate broken down by category: foundation, framing, windows, roofing, and cooling.
Once you sign a contract, we file the building permit with the City of Beaumont before any work begins. This typically takes one to three weeks. Use that time to finalize finish details - flooring, ceiling style, window configuration - so nothing delays construction once the permit comes through.
Construction starts with the foundation, then framing, windows, roofing, and the cooling connection. City inspectors visit at multiple stages - foundation, framing, and final completion. When the room is finished, we walk through it with you, hand you all permit documents, and give you a maintenance checklist.
We respond within 1 business day - no obligation and no pressure. After you submit, someone from our office will call to discuss your project and schedule a free on-site visit at a time that works for you.
(409) 240-0365Every four season sunroom we build is framed and anchored to meet Beaumont's wind-load code requirements - not basic residential standards. The framing connections, roof tie-in, and glazing systems are all selected with Southeast Texas storm exposure in mind. The Texas Windstorm Insurance Association sets requirements for this region that we design to.
We file every permit before construction begins and schedule all city inspections. You get copies of every document at the end of the project - foundation inspection, framing sign-off, and final completion certificate. That paper trail matters when you refinance or sell.
We assess soil conditions at your property before designing the foundation. In Jefferson County, that often means deeper footings or a pier system to handle the clay's expansion and contraction cycle. This step is what separates a room that stays level and sealed from one that develops problems within two or three years.
We have built in Beaumont and the surrounding area since 2018. We know which neighborhoods sit near flood zones, how the city's permit office operates, and what the soil looks like across different parts of Jefferson County. That local knowledge directly affects how we plan and price your project.
Building a four season sunroom in Beaumont is not the same as building one in a drier, calmer part of the country. Every decision - the foundation depth, the glass specification, the cooling system, the permit documentation - is shaped by the conditions here. The U.S. Department of Energy publishes guidance on energy-efficient window standards that we follow when specifying glazing for all of our sunroom builds.
A lower-cost option for homeowners who want to use their sunroom primarily in spring, fall, and mild Beaumont winters.
Learn MoreYear-round room designs that combine indoor comfort with flexible connections to covered outdoor living areas.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up before peak season - reach out now to lock in your build date and beat the wait.