
Screened and glass-panel rooms built for Beaumont heat, rain, and clay soil. Permitted work, written quotes, no sales pressure.

Three season sunrooms in Beaumont, TX are screened or glass-panel additions attached to your home that let you enjoy the outdoors without full exposure to heat, rain, or insects. Most projects run one to three weeks of active construction once the permit is in hand - the City of Beaumont requires a permit before work begins on any permanent addition.
If you have a covered patio you barely use from May through October, a three season room is typically the most cost-effective fix. It is not fully insulated like a four season sunroom - but in Beaumont's mild-to-moderate winters, that insulation gap rarely matters. You get a shaded, screened space that is genuinely comfortable for the better part of the year.
The biggest thing that separates a long-lasting room from one that causes headaches is watertight construction. Beaumont gets over 55 inches of rain annually, and every connection point between your new room and your home's exterior wall has to be sealed properly. We also design foundations to account for the clay soil movement that is a fact of life in Jefferson County.
If your outdoor space sits empty for months because Beaumont's heat and mosquitoes make it unbearable, that is the clearest sign a sunroom would change how you use your home. A screened, shaded room gives you back those months without requiring a full addition.
Beaumont's warm, wet climate keeps mosquitoes active for most of the year. If you cannot sit outside after dark without being swarmed, a screened sunroom solves that problem completely - you get the breeze and the view without the insects.
If you walk past your back porch every day and rarely stop, it is usually because it lacks comfort and protection. A three season sunroom transforms that dead space into a room you actually want to use - for morning coffee, weekend meals, or just unwinding at the end of the day.
If the cover over your outdoor space is showing rust, rot, or sag, replacing it with a proper sunroom structure is often smarter than patching what is there. You get a more durable, more functional space, and a contractor can assess whether your existing slab is in good enough shape to build on.
Most three season rooms in Beaumont start with a choice between screened walls and glass-panel walls. Screened walls give you maximum airflow - important in Beaumont's humidity - while glass panels block wind and light rain. Many homeowners choose a combination: screened sections for airflow plus a glass or polycarbonate roof panel to keep rain out. We build each room to the specific orientation of your lot, because a south- or west-facing room needs more shading than a north-facing one.
If you are not sure whether a three season room fits your needs or whether you should step up to a fully climate-controlled space, we can walk you through the difference between a three season room and a patio enclosure or a screen room installation. Some homeowners find the lighter screen-room option is all they need. Others want a more fully enclosed space. The right answer depends on how you plan to use the room and what your budget allows.
Best for homeowners who want maximum airflow and bug protection for spring, summer, and fall use.
Best for homeowners who want protection from wind and light rain in addition to insects, extending comfort into cooler months.
Best for homeowners who want screened sections for breeze plus a solid roof or glass panels on exposed sides.
Best for homeowners who already have a covered concrete slab and want to enclose it efficiently without starting from scratch.
Beaumont sits in one of the most humid regions in the continental United States, with summer heat index values that regularly climb past 105 degrees. That level of heat and humidity makes a standard uncovered porch nearly useless from June through September. A three season room with screened walls, a ceiling fan, and shading on the south and west sides changes that - the room becomes somewhere you actually want to be, not somewhere you endure. Homeowners near central Beaumont deal with the same heat and clay-soil foundation concerns as anyone else in Jefferson County, and getting the foundation design right upfront is the single most important factor in a room that holds up over years.
Southeast Texas also averages over 55 inches of rain annually, and Beaumont has seen serious flooding events that remind every homeowner what poorly drained outdoor structures look like the morning after a storm. We design every roofline to slope water away from your foundation and seal every connection point between the room and your home's exterior wall. Homeowners in Lumberton and the surrounding area face the same rainfall and soil conditions, and the construction approach has to match what the climate actually demands. A room built to handle a real Gulf Coast storm is one you can enjoy without worry the next morning.
For more on how we design for local conditions, the National Association of Home Builders and the National Weather Service Beaumont climate data both publish useful resources on building in high-humidity, high-rainfall regions.
You reach out and we ask a few basics - what space you have in mind, whether you have an existing slab, how you plan to use the room. We reply within one business day. No sales pressure, just a short conversation so we can come prepared.
We visit your home, take measurements, and walk you through your options - size, wall panel style, roofline, electrical. We also look at your existing slab and the soil around the foundation area, because both affect how the project is built and priced. You leave with a written quote.
We submit the permit application to the City of Beaumont on your behalf - typically one to two weeks depending on city workload. You do not need to do anything during this step. We will confirm the permit is approved before the crew shows up.
Framing, roofing, and panel installation typically run one to two weeks of active construction. A city inspector reviews the finished work. We walk you through the completed room, show you how every door and window operates, and make sure everything is to your satisfaction before we close out the project.
Written quote, permitted work, no obligation. We reply within one business day.
(409) 240-0365Beaumont's expansive clay soils move with every wet-dry cycle, and a sunroom built without accounting for that will show it within a year or two. We design footings specifically for Jefferson County soil conditions - deeper where needed, reinforced where the data calls for it. Your doors will open smoothly two years from now.
We pull the permit with the City of Beaumont before a single board goes up, every time. That means a city inspector - not just us - confirms the work meets local safety standards. It also means you have clean paperwork when you sell your home or file an insurance claim.
Southeast Texas averages over 55 inches of rain per year, and a sunroom with a poorly designed roofline will show its weakness the first time a real storm rolls through. Every connection point and drainage slope we build is designed for Gulf Coast weather, not light showers.
We are a state-licensed and fully insured sunroom contractor operating out of Beaumont. You can verify contractor licensing through the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation at tdlr.texas.gov. That accountability is part of every project we take on.
Every one of those details adds up to a room that is still solid and watertight years after we finish - and that is a claim you can verify by asking for references from Beaumont homeowners we have worked with. We will provide them.
Turn an existing concrete patio into a protected room - glass or screen options, full weather enclosure.
Learn MoreLightweight screened addition perfect for bug protection and airflow without the cost of a fully enclosed room.
Learn MorePermit slots and contractor schedules in Beaumont fill fast before spring - reach out today and we will lock in your start date.