
Beaumont Sunrooms & Patios builds enclosed patio rooms, sunroom additions, and screen rooms across Groves. We assess flood risk and clay soil conditions at every site, pull all permits through the city, and design every room around Southeast Texas summers and storm seasons.

Groves homeowners typically have a covered back patio that sits empty from June through August because the heat and insects make it unusable. An enclosed patio room converts that dead space into a usable, protected area without the cost of a full room addition. We work with your existing structure where the slab and roofline are in good shape, which keeps the project efficient.
Most Groves homes are ranch-style builds from the 1950s through 1970s - solid structures with modest square footage that benefit from additional living space. A sunroom addition expands the home without a full interior renovation, and the permitting process through the city is one we handle on every project. We assess the existing slab and exterior wall connection before building to avoid surprises after the fact.
Groves summers run hot and humid from May well into October, and the occasional hard freeze makes a three-season room impractical for year-round use. A four season room with full insulation and an HVAC connection delivers a space you can use on any day of the year. This is the most requested build type for Groves homeowners who want a room that functions as real living space.
Groves' flat lots and slow-draining terrain mean an open patio is prone to pooling water and standing moisture near the foundation after heavy rains. Enclosing the patio with a roof and screened or glass panels solves both the pest problem and gives the space weather protection. We evaluate drainage around the slab as part of every patio enclosure estimate so the finished structure does not trap water against your home.
The warm months bring insects in force to Groves, and a screen room gives homeowners a way to enjoy spring and fall evenings without dealing with mosquitoes or gnats. Screen rooms are the most affordable entry point for an outdoor living enclosure and can often be completed faster than a glass-panel build. If your main goal is pest control rather than temperature control, this is usually the most cost-effective path.
Older sunrooms in Groves often have the same problems: single-pane glass that traps heat, seals that have failed after years of humidity, and no real connection to the home's air conditioning. We update these rooms with modern insulated glass, new weatherstripping, and HVAC integration to bring them up to a standard where they're livable in summer. In many cases, a targeted remodel costs significantly less than a full teardown and rebuild.
Groves is a small residential city sandwiched between Port Arthur and Port Neches in Jefferson County, sitting at very low elevation on flat coastal plain terrain. The ground here holds water after heavy rain - the city averages 55 to 60 inches of annual rainfall, and the clay-heavy soil does not absorb it quickly. That combination creates ongoing moisture pressure against foundations and slabs that any sunroom contractor working in Groves needs to design around. A room built without drainage assessment and proper slab preparation can develop water intrusion or frame movement within the first few years of Gulf Coast weather.
The age of the housing stock matters here too. Most Groves homes were built between the 1950s and 1980s on concrete slab foundations that have been sitting on expansive clay soil for decades. Those slabs shift with every wet-dry cycle, and older homes may have repairs or patches in the concrete that affect how a new room ties in. Groves also sits in a direct hurricane threat zone - the area felt the effects of both Hurricane Rita in 2005 and Tropical Storm Harvey in 2017, which means storm exposure is a real design consideration, not a remote possibility. We factor wind, water, and soil movement into every build we do in this city.
Our crew works throughout Groves regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Groves and know the building department's permit process and inspection requirements for room additions in this municipality.
Groves is a purely residential city - no real downtown, mostly streets of houses and a few commercial strips along the main roads. We've worked on homes near Groves City Park and throughout the neighborhoods that run from the Port Neches line on the west to the Port Arthur boundary on the east. Most homes are one-story brick or vinyl-sided ranch houses with flat lots and concrete slab pads out back - exactly the kind of property that converts well to a sunroom or enclosed patio room. Sabine Lake sits just to the east of the city, and the proximity to open water is a reminder that storm surge and wind exposure are real considerations for any structure added to a home here.
Just to the north, Nederland shares nearly identical building conditions - same clay soil, same flood history, same postwar ranch-home stock. We cover both cities regularly and consider them part of the same service corridor. If you're near the Groves-Nederland line, you're solidly within our regular route.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and we respond within one business day. We ask a few questions upfront about your space, your goals, and any known drainage or foundation issues so we can come prepared.
We visit your property, measure the space, assess your slab for clay soil movement, and check lot drainage around the proposed build area. You get a written, itemized estimate covering materials, labor, permits, and slab prep - no lump sums.
We file the permit application with the City of Groves and finalize all design details while the city reviews it, typically two to three weeks. Construction does not begin until the permit is approved.
Our crew completes the build in phases with city inspections at required stages. After the final walkthrough with you, we leave the site clean and hand over copies of all inspection records.
We serve Groves homeowners with free on-site estimates, permit management, and builds designed around Jefferson County flood and soil conditions.
(409) 240-0365Groves is a small city of about 15,000 people in Jefferson County, located between Port Arthur to the east and Port Neches to the west, with Nederland just to the north. The city grew during the postwar petrochemical boom as workers needed affordable housing near the refineries and plants that define the Golden Triangle economy. Most of its housing stock dates from the 1950s through the 1980s - single-story brick veneer and vinyl-sided ranch homes on modest lots with slab foundations. The city is largely residential with no significant downtown district, giving it a quiet neighborhood character that long-term residents tend to value. Information about Groves' history and geography reflects a place where families put down roots and stay.
The homeownership rate in Groves is high relative to national averages, and many residents have lived in the same home for 20 years or more. That means accumulated deferred maintenance on older systems alongside a genuine motivation to invest in improvements. The city sits close to Sabine Lake and the Intracoastal Waterway, and the proximity to the coast reinforces why flood awareness and storm-resilient construction practices matter for any addition to a home here. Neighboring Nederland to the north shares essentially the same conditions, and we run service calls in both cities on the same routes throughout the week.
Keep bugs out while enjoying fresh air with a quality screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreTurn your deck into a weather-protected sunroom you can use year-round.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and protect your outdoor area.
Learn MoreCall us or submit a request online and we will respond within one business day. Every Groves project starts with an on-site slab assessment and a written, itemized estimate.