
Advanced Carson Sunrooms & Patios brings sunroom additions, four season rooms, and patio enclosures to Long Beach homeowners, with crews who understand coastal salt air, older housing stock, and City of Long Beach permit requirements. We respond within 1 business day and handle every step from permit application to final inspection.
Advanced Carson Sunrooms & Patios brings sunroom additions, four season rooms, and patio enclosures to Long Beach homeowners, with crews who understand coastal salt air, older housing stock, and City of Long Beach permit requirements. We respond within 1 business day and handle every step from permit application to final inspection.

Long Beach's older housing stock - from the Craftsman bungalows in California Heights to the Spanish Colonial homes in Wrigley - often has existing patios that are ideal footprints for a full sunroom addition. We assess the existing slab and framing before any contract is signed, so there are no surprises mid-project.
Long Beach's occasional winter rains and persistent marine layer mean a simple screen enclosure won't hold up year-round - a fully insulated four season room gives you a comfortable space regardless of what the weather is doing outside. These rooms are connected to your home's heating and cooling system, making them genuinely usable on the damp, overcast mornings that are common from December through May.
Many Long Beach homes - especially in Belmont Shore and Naples - have compact yards and covered patios that are steps from the back door. Enclosing that covered space is one of the most practical ways to add usable square footage without a major structural undertaking, and the result is a weathertight room that keeps out the salt air and coastal fog.
Long Beach's mild temperatures make screen rooms a practical choice for homeowners who want outdoor airflow without insects - especially in the warmer east side neighborhoods like El Dorado Park where yards tend to be larger. A well-built screen room also filters out some of the particulate matter that comes from nearby industrial corridors and port activity.
Long Beach's diverse housing stock - Spanish Revival, Craftsman, midcentury ranch, and modern condo conversions - means one-size-fits-all designs rarely look right. A custom sunroom designed to match your home's existing roofline and exterior materials will look like it was always there, which matters both for curb appeal and resale value in a competitive market.
For Long Beach homeowners near the coast, vinyl framing is a smart choice because it resists corrosion from salt air far better than standard aluminum profiles. Homes in neighborhoods like Alamitos Beach and Naples that are just blocks from the water benefit especially from frames that won't rust, pit, or require repainting every few years.
A large share of Long Beach's residential housing was built before 1960, with neighborhoods like Bixby Knolls, California Heights, and the Wrigley district full of Craftsman bungalows and Spanish Colonial Revival homes that are 80 to 100 years old. These homes have original plaster walls, aging electrical panels, and foundations that have settled over decades - and attaching a new sunroom to a structure of that age requires careful assessment before any framing begins. A contractor who routinely works in Long Beach knows to check the existing slab level, the condition of the ledger attachment point, and whether the existing electrical service can support the new room before a contract is ever signed.
Long Beach's coastal position on San Pedro Bay means salt air, persistent morning fog from the marine layer, and occasional heavy rain during El Nino winters are all real forces acting on your home's exterior. Homes within a mile or two of the water see faster corrosion on metal hardware, faster breakdown of caulked joints, and more moisture intrusion into attic spaces and crawl spaces than homes just a few miles inland. Any contractor you hire for a sunroom addition in Long Beach should be specifying materials rated for coastal conditions - not the same framing profiles and hardware they'd use in an inland suburb.
Our crew works throughout Long Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The city is large and varied - a job in Belmont Shore involves tight lot access and older beach bungalows built close together, while a job out in El Dorado Park means wider lots, ranch-style construction from the 1960s and 1970s, and more room to work. Knowing those differences before we arrive makes every project more efficient.
Long Beach permit applications go through the Long Beach Development Services Department. We handle the permit application on your behalf, communicate with the plan check staff during review, and make sure inspections are scheduled at each required stage. Plan review for room additions typically takes two to four weeks, so we factor that into your timeline from the first conversation.
Long Beach sits about 25 miles south of Los Angeles along the 710 freeway corridor, and its neighborhoods range from the working waterfront near the Port of Long Beach to the quieter residential streets near the Carson, CA border to the north. We also serve homeowners in Lomita and the surrounding South Bay area, so we're familiar with this entire corridor.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we'll respond within 1 business day. We'll ask a few basic questions - what you're hoping to build, roughly how large, and whether you have an existing patio or slab we'd be working with.
We visit your Long Beach home to measure the space, assess the existing foundation or slab, and check for any coastal material considerations. This visit is free and comes with a written estimate - no surprise costs added later.
After you sign a contract, we prepare and submit the permit application to Long Beach Development Services on your behalf. We keep you updated throughout the review period - typically two to four weeks - and notify you immediately when permits are approved.
Construction runs three to six weeks for most projects. City inspections are scheduled at required stages, and the job isn't done until the final inspection passes and you've walked through the completed room with us.
We serve Long Beach homeowners from Belmont Shore to El Dorado Park. Free estimates, no pressure, and we handle all Long Beach permits.
(424) 388-5348Long Beach is one of the largest cities in California, stretching across roughly 50 square miles along San Pedro Bay. The city contains more than a dozen distinct neighborhoods, each with its own character and housing stock. Belmont Shore and Naples are coastal neighborhoods packed with small bungalows and beach cottages on tight lots, some adjacent to man-made canals. Moving inland, Bixby Knolls and California Heights feature tree-lined streets with Craftsman and Tudor homes from the 1920s and 1930s, while the east side neighborhoods of El Dorado Park and Los Altos have ranch-style homes built in the 1960s and 1970s on wider lots. According to the city's history, Long Beach grew rapidly in the early 20th century following the oil boom and the expansion of the port, which shaped the density and variety of its residential neighborhoods.
The Port of Long Beach is one of the busiest container ports in the United States and a defining feature of the city's waterfront - locals see its cranes and container ships as a constant backdrop to daily life in the western neighborhoods. The Queen Mary, permanently docked in Long Beach Harbor, is the city's most iconic landmark. With about 466,000 residents and a mix of owner-occupied and rental housing across its neighborhoods, Long Beach is a working city with a wide range of homeowners. Neighbors to the south include Torrance and Lomita, where we also serve homeowners regularly.
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Learn MoreCall today or request a free estimate online - we respond within 1 business day and handle all Long Beach permit paperwork from start to finish.