
Your covered patio sits empty every summer. We enclose it into a fully insulated, climate-controlled room you can use even when it is 105 degrees outside.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Odessa means building walls, windows, and a proper roof over your existing covered slab, then connecting the new room to your home's heating and cooling - most projects run six to twelve weeks from permit approval through final walkthrough.
If your patio already has a slab in decent shape, that is your head start - we build on top of it rather than starting from scratch, which saves both time and money. The result is a real room attached to your house, not a screened-in porch or a glorified tent.
If you are still deciding between options, our deck-to-sunroom conversion service covers a similar process for homes with an existing deck instead of a slab patio. Both routes end up in the same place: a usable, enclosed room that works for Odessa's climate.
If your covered patio is too hot to use from June through September, you are losing four to five months of that space every year. Odessa summers regularly top 100 degrees, and no amount of shade makes an open patio comfortable in that heat. A properly insulated, air-conditioned sunroom gives you that space back.
Diagonal cracks in your concrete or a noticeable tilt when you set something flat on the surface are signs that the soil underneath has shifted. Odessa sits on clay-heavy soil that expands and contracts with moisture, and it is far better to address slab issues before building walls on top. We assess the slab before quoting a final price.
If the existing roof over your patio is sagging, or the flashing where it meets your home is separating, the structure is already failing. Patching a cover that is on its way out usually costs more over time than converting the space into a properly built, permanent enclosed room.
Odessa dust storms make open outdoor spaces frustrating - you spend more time cleaning furniture than sitting on it. A properly sealed sunroom keeps the grit out while still giving you a view of the yard and natural light through the glass.
We handle the full project - slab assessment, permit application, framing, windows, roof, electrical, and HVAC connection - so you are not managing a parade of separate contractors. For homeowners who want to upgrade an existing slab patio to a fully enclosed year-round room, this is a single-source process. If you have already thought about enclosed patio rooms, a full conversion takes that concept further by adding climate control and connecting the room to your home's existing systems.
For homeowners who want a lighter-touch option before committing to full enclosure, we can discuss where your project falls on the spectrum. We also offer deck-to-sunroom conversion for properties where the outdoor space is a raised deck rather than a ground-level slab. Every project is permitted through the City of Odessa and built to handle the specific demands of West Texas weather.
Best for homeowners who want a fully insulated, climate-controlled room they can use every month of the year.
Suits homeowners in milder microclimates or those seeking a lower-cost entry point who understand the summer trade-offs.
Ideal when the existing concrete slab is in good shape and can serve as the finished floor for the new room.
Right for patios with clay-soil damage, cracking, or settling that needs to be addressed before walls can go up.
Odessa's climate is the main reason homeowners here make this investment. When temperatures stay above 100 degrees for weeks at a time, an open or lightly covered patio is genuinely unusable - not just uncomfortable. A four-season sunroom with real insulation and air conditioning turns that dead space into a room your family actually uses in July. Homeowners in Penwell and the surrounding communities face the same brutal West Texas summers, and this conversion is one of the most practical ways to get more out of property you already own.
Odessa's clay-heavy soil is the other major factor. Shrink-swell soil movement is one of the most common reasons patio slabs develop cracks or tilt over time, and it matters a great deal when you are adding the weight of walls and a roof. Homeowners in newer subdivisions - particularly in Gardendale and surrounding areas - also need to factor in HOA approval alongside the city building permit, since those are two separate processes. We are familiar with both and help you work through each before construction starts.
We ask about your patio size, whether it has an existing cover, and what you want to use the room for. You reply within one business day and we schedule an on-site visit at your convenience.
We inspect the slab condition, measure the space, and review how the patio connects to your home. Within a week you receive a written estimate broken down by structure, windows, roofing, electrical, and HVAC - no vague lump sums.
We submit to the City of Odessa Development Services and, if your neighborhood requires it, help you prepare the HOA submission. Plan for two to four weeks - use that time to finalize windows, flooring, and interior details.
Once permits are approved, framing, windows, roofing, and HVAC connection happen in sequence. After the city inspector signs off, we walk you through the finished room and hand over permit and inspection records.
We assess your slab, handle the permits, and give you a written estimate with no pressure to move forward.
(432) 280-0177We inspect your concrete before we quote you a final number. In Odessa, clay soil movement can compromise a slab in ways that are not obvious from the surface - finding that out before walls go up saves you from expensive surprises mid-project.
We submit the application to the City of Odessa Development Services, schedule the required inspections, and hand you the documentation when the job is done. You do not have to navigate the permit office or worry about missing an inspection step.
Windows, seals, and roof connections are specified for sustained wind pressure and fine dust infiltration - both real concerns in the Permian Basin. The National Association of Home Builders sets standards for enclosed additions, and we build to meet them in a climate far more demanding than the national average.
We have been working on homes in this area long enough to know which neighborhoods have HOA requirements, which soil zones shift the most, and what Odessa summers actually do to a poorly insulated room. That local knowledge shows up in how we design and build each project.
Every one of these details adds up to a project that holds up over time - not one that looks fine on move-in day and develops problems by the first rainy season. If you want to learn more about industry standards for enclosed additions, the National Association of Home Builders is a good reference for what best-practice construction looks like.
Convert a raised deck into an enclosed, climate-controlled sunroom using the existing deck frame as a starting point.
Learn MoreExplore enclosed patio room options for homeowners who want a protected outdoor living space with a range of enclosure levels.
Learn MorePermit review takes two to four weeks - start the process now so your new room is ready before next summer's heat arrives.