
Beaumont Sunrooms & Patios serves Vidor with patio enclosures, screen rooms, and four season sunrooms built for Orange County's heat, heavy rainfall, and clay soil. We handle every permit through the city and inspect your slab before we build anything on top of it.

Vidor's flat terrain and slow-draining soil mean a plain open patio fills with standing water and mosquitoes after every heavy rain. A patio enclosure converts that underused slab into a protected space you can use even when the yard is wet. We work with your existing covered structure where possible and address any drainage issues around the perimeter before we enclose it.
Vidor summers are long and intense - heat index values regularly exceed 105 degrees from June through September - and any room without insulation and real cooling becomes unusable during those months. A four season sunroom is fully insulated, glazed with low-E glass, and connected to HVAC so it functions as a year-round living space. It's the right investment for Vidor homeowners who want a room they can actually use on the worst days of the year.
The months from October through April in Vidor are genuinely pleasant outdoors, but the insects that come with living near the Sabine River make evenings outside difficult without a screen barrier. A screen room is the most affordable enclosure type and the fastest to build, making it a practical choice for Vidor homeowners who primarily want spring and fall outdoor living space. It requires no HVAC connection and can often be completed in under two weeks.
Many Vidor homes from the 1960s and 1970s were built small by today's standards - typically two or three bedrooms with no dedicated family room or flex space. A sunroom addition expands the footprint of the house without the cost and disruption of a full interior renovation. The new room adds insured, conditioned living space and typically increases the home's appraised value.
An uncovered concrete slab in Vidor absorbs heat all morning and becomes too hot to stand on by midday in summer. A solid or insulated patio cover blocks direct sun, drops the surface temperature significantly, and makes outdoor cooking practical again from spring through fall. It also protects the slab from direct rain impact, which slows the clay soil movement that cracks concrete over time.
Older sunrooms on Vidor homes often have single-pane windows that let in the summer heat and leak during wind-driven rain from Gulf Coast storms. Updating the glazing to low-E glass, sealing the frame properly, and connecting the room to HVAC can turn a room that's used only in winter into one that works year-round. A focused remodel is almost always less expensive than demolishing and rebuilding from the slab up.
Vidor is a city of about 10,500 people in Orange County, built up primarily between the 1950s and 1980s. Most homes here are single-story ranch-style or small wood-frame houses on modest lots, with a significant share sitting on pier-and-beam foundations - a construction method that was common in this part of Southeast Texas before concrete slabs became standard. Those older pier-and-beam foundations are more vulnerable to moisture intrusion and settlement than a properly maintained slab, and Vidor's flat terrain with slow-draining soil makes moisture management a real concern on every project. A contractor who hasn't worked in this specific type of housing stock won't recognize the warning signs before they become expensive problems.
Orange County's climate adds another layer of complexity. The area sits directly in the Gulf Coast hurricane belt and has been hit by major storms including Rita (2005), Ike (2008), and Harvey (2017). Many Vidor homes have been repaired or partially rebuilt after flooding - sometimes quickly and not always to current code. When we come out for an estimate, we look at the existing structure honestly and tell you what we find, including any prior repair work that may affect how we build the new room. Every enclosed structure we build in Orange County is designed to meet Texas Windstorm Insurance Association standards so your home remains insurable after the project is done.
Our crew works throughout Vidor regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Vidor and know the building department's process for room addition permits in this municipality.
Interstate 10 runs straight through the middle of Vidor, connecting the city to Beaumont to the west and Orange to the east - it's the road our crew uses on virtually every job. We work on homes throughout the city, from the neighborhoods north of I-10 to the streets south toward the Sabine River. The residential areas here are a mix of original 1960s and 1970s ranch houses and homes that have been updated or partially rebuilt after storm damage over the years.
We also serve Orange directly to the east and Beaumont to the west, and we run the I-10 corridor between all three cities routinely. Vidor homeowners are well within our standard service area with no extra travel charges.
Reach out by phone or through the online form and we respond within one business day. We ask a few quick questions about your space, your existing slab condition if you have one, and what you want the room to do for you.
We visit your Vidor property, measure the space, inspect your existing concrete for flood damage and clay soil movement, and check the surrounding grade for drainage problems. The written estimate separates materials, labor, permit fees, and any slab prep work clearly - no bundled lump sums.
We submit the permit application to the City of Vidor and confirm the construction schedule once the permit is approved. You do not need to be home during every permit-related step - we handle the paperwork and inspection scheduling.
Construction typically takes four to seven weeks once the permit clears. We schedule the city's final inspection and walk through the finished room with you before we consider the job complete.
We serve Vidor homeowners with no travel surcharge. Estimates are written and itemized - no surprises.
(409) 240-0365Vidor is a city of roughly 10,500 residents in Orange County, situated along Interstate 10 between Beaumont to the west and Orange to the east. The Sabine River defines the eastern edge of Vidor and the Texas-Louisiana state line, and the flat terrain throughout the city reflects the Gulf Coast plain that defines this part of Southeast Texas. Most of Vidor's residential neighborhoods were developed between the 1950s and 1980s, and the housing stock reflects that era - ranch-style homes on modest lots, a mix of brick veneer and wood-frame construction, and a high share of owner-occupied single-family houses. Homeownership rates in Vidor are high, and most residents have lived in the area for years or decades.
The community is tightly connected to the broader Beaumont-Port Arthur metro area and to the petrochemical and industrial economy that defines the Golden Triangle region. Vidor sits in a flood-prone area and has been affected by multiple major storms over the years, which means a significant number of homes have repair and rebuild history that any contractor working here needs to understand. We work frequently in Orange just to the east, where similar housing stock and drainage conditions create the same set of challenges, and we carry that experience directly to projects in Vidor. You can read more about Vidor's history and community to get a fuller picture of the city.
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.
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