
Your concrete slab is already there. We frame it, roof it, enclose it, and hand you a solid, weather-protected room you can actually use.

Enclosed patio rooms in Odessa are permanent additions with a solid roof, insulated or glass walls, and a foundation - often the concrete slab you already have - turning an open outdoor space into a protected, usable room, with most builds completed in one to three weeks once permits are approved.
The difference between an enclosed patio room and a sunroom is mainly in what the walls are made of and how much glass is involved. An enclosed patio room typically has solid insulated walls with windows, while a sunroom features more glass coverage for a lighter, airier feel. Both are permanent - both need permits - and both solve the same core problem: an outdoor space in Odessa that is too hot, too dusty, or too exposed to actually enjoy.
If you are weighing options and want a year-round, fully climate-controlled experience from day one, you might also want to look at our solarium installation service, which maximizes natural light through glass on three or more sides. For now, an enclosed patio room is typically the most practical and cost-efficient path to turning an unused slab into a room your family will actually use.
If your outdoor space sits unused from late May through September because the Odessa heat is simply unbearable, an open patio is not working for your lifestyle. A climate-controlled enclosed room lets you reclaim that space for the majority of the year, not just the brief mild weeks in spring and fall that West Texas actually delivers.
Odessa's open terrain means wind-driven dust and sand are a regular fact of life. If you are wiping down patio furniture every time you want to sit outside, or if a dust storm sends you inside before you finish your coffee, an enclosed room solves that problem completely - no gaps, no infiltration, no cleanup.
Many Odessa homes were built with a basic back patio slab that never got a cover or enclosure. If that slab is just collecting heat and leaves, it is already the foundation for an enclosed patio room. The hardest part of the job may already be done.
If you already have a patio cover that is showing its age - water stains, panels rattling in the wind, or a structure that radiates heat rather than blocking it - that is a natural moment to upgrade to a fully enclosed room rather than patch what is there and face the same problems again in two years.
We build enclosed patio rooms in Odessa from the foundation up - or in many cases, from the existing slab you already have. If your slab is in solid shape, we assess it, frame the walls, tie the roof into your home's existing structure, and finish with windows, insulation, and whatever level of climate control you want. The result looks like it belongs to the house - not like a box that was bolted to the back of it. If you already have a patio cover and want to go further, we also offer patio cover installation as a separate, lower-commitment service for homeowners who are not ready for a full enclosure.
The enclosure itself can range from solid insulated walls with standard windows to a more light-filled configuration that approaches a sunroom. Homeowners who want maximum glass coverage often move toward our solarium installation option, which features glass on three or more sides and a thermally broken frame designed for Odessa's UV load. We walk through both options during the site visit so you can see which layout makes the most sense for your space and how you plan to use it.
Suits homeowners with an existing concrete slab in good condition who want the fastest path to an enclosed, weather-protected room.
Suits properties without an existing slab or where the current concrete is too thin or cracked to build on.
Suits homeowners who want year-round use with a mini-split added to the build from the start.
Suits homeowners replacing a lean-to or resting patio cover with a roof properly anchored to handle West Texas wind uplift.
Odessa's open, flat terrain means wind is a constant factor - not an occasional problem. A roof that is simply leaned against your house is not enough. It needs to be anchored into your home's framing to handle the uplift that comes with sustained West Texas gusts and the occasional severe thunderstorm. That structural tie-in is standard practice on every enclosed patio room we build, because we know what happens to roofs that were not built that way. The National Association of Home Builders and the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation both set standards for this kind of permanent structural work - and a permitted project in Odessa is inspected against those standards.
On the foundation side, much of Odessa sits on caliche - a hard, calcium-rich soil layer that can be difficult to excavate but provides a relatively stable base when properly prepared. We regularly work with homeowners in Penwell and Coahoma across the region, and local soil knowledge shapes how we approach the foundation on every project - whether we are working on an existing slab or pouring a new one.
We respond within one business day. The opening conversation covers the size of your existing slab, how you plan to use the room, and whether your subdivision has HOA restrictions - so the site visit starts with the right information already in hand.
We measure the space, look at your existing slab and roofline, and talk through your options in person. A written estimate - not a ballpark number - follows within a few days. This is your chance to ask anything before any commitment is made.
We submit plans to the City of Odessa Development Services before any work starts and, if your neighborhood has an HOA, walk you through what documentation is required. This step typically takes one to three weeks. We track it - you should not have to chase anyone for updates.
Foundation prep, framing, roofing, and windows happen in sequence. The city inspector reviews the finished work. After that passes, we walk you through the room, cover maintenance basics, and hand over any warranty documents. That is the last day you should need to call us for anything other than a future project.
Free estimate, no pressure. We handle permits, soil assessment, and HOA coordination - and we give you a written price before anyone picks up a hammer.
(432) 280-0177Every roof we build is structurally tied into your home's framing - not just resting against it. Odessa's open terrain produces sustained winds and occasional severe storms that will expose any roof that was not properly fastened. Ours are built to stay put.
Odessa sits on caliche, a hard soil layer that behaves differently from what contractors trained in wetter climates expect. We assess the foundation conditions before designing the slab or preparing the existing one - that step prevents the cracking and settling that show up in poorly planned enclosures a few years down the road.
We submit the permit to the City of Odessa Development Services before a single board goes up. A permitted build means an inspector reviews the work, you have documentation for your home sale, and no one is knocking on your door asking you to tear something down.
One of the most common complaints about contractors in this market is the gap between the estimate and the final invoice. We give you an itemized written estimate before work begins, and we stand behind it. You know what you are agreeing to before you sign.
Building an enclosed patio room correctly in Odessa means accounting for the wind, the soil, the permits, and the pricing from the very first conversation. That is how we approach every project - and why the homeowners we build for do not need to call someone else to fix problems we left behind.
A solarium maximizes natural light with glass on three or more sides, giving you a sun-filled room distinct from a standard enclosure.
Learn MoreA freestanding or attached patio cover is a lower-commitment first step before a full enclosure if you want shade without walls.
Learn MoreCity approvals in Odessa take one to three weeks. Reach out today for a free estimate and get your enclosed patio room on the schedule before the summer rush.