
Bug-free evenings, shaded afternoons, and a permanent outdoor room built on your existing patio. Permitted, priced fairly, and done in a few days.

Screen room installation in Pomona means attaching an aluminum-framed, mesh-enclosed room to your existing home and patio slab, creating a shaded outdoor space you can use year-round - most installations take two to four days of construction once the city permit is approved.
A screen room sits between a covered patio and a full sunroom. It breathes freely - fresh air, natural light, views of your yard - without the bugs, direct sun, or cost of a fully climate-controlled addition. If you want the outdoor feel of a screen room but with the option to fully enclose it later, our patio enclosures service offers a hybrid path. For homeowners who have already decided they want full walls and climate control, our patio-to-sunroom conversion service handles that scope.
Pomona's east-facing and south-facing patios can become uncomfortably bright and hot within hours of sunrise. A screen room with solar mesh creates a shaded, breezy space you can actually sit in through the afternoon - not just at dawn.
If you cannot enjoy a meal or a conversation outside after dark without mosquitoes or gnats ruining it, a screen room solves that problem completely. Pomona's warm evenings from spring through fall are genuinely pleasant - a screen room lets you take full advantage of them.
Many Pomona homes have an existing patio slab the family barely uses because there is no shade or enclosure. If your slab is in decent shape, it can often serve as the floor for a screen room without additional concrete work, which keeps costs down.
If you have an aluminum patio cover or wood pergola that is rusting, sagging, or just looking worn out, replacing it with a proper screen room is a natural upgrade. Rather than patching an old structure, you get a fully enclosed functional space that adds value to your home.
Our screen room installations use aluminum framing - the same material used across the industry for its strength, light weight, and resistance to rust and warping in the Inland Empire climate. We attach the frame securely to your home with proper flashing at every connection point, which is the most common failure spot on poorly built screen rooms. If you want a hybrid design that can be partially closed during wildfire smoke season, ask us about panels that can be added to any screen room. For those looking for a fully enclosed space with solid walls, our patio-to-sunroom conversion service takes the project further.
Mesh choice is one of the most important decisions you make for a screen room in Pomona. Standard fiberglass mesh is affordable but lets in more UV and heat. Solar screen mesh blocks a meaningful portion of heat before it enters the room. We bring samples to every estimate visit so you can feel the difference and decide what is right for your yard. For homeowners who want more shade than a screen room provides, our patio enclosures service offers a step up in enclosure and insulation.
Suits homeowners who want a bug-free, shaded outdoor space at an accessible price point, built on an existing patio slab.
Best for south- or west-facing patios in Pomona where afternoon heat is a problem - solar mesh keeps the room noticeably cooler in summer.
For homeowners who want flexibility to seal the room during smoke events or cold winter evenings without committing to a full enclosure.
Suited for yards without an existing concrete pad - we pour the slab and build the room in one project scope.
Pomona sits in the eastern San Gabriel Valley where summer temperatures regularly climb into the mid-90s and occasionally top 100 degrees. That level of heat means the type of screen mesh your contractor recommends really matters - a solar-blocking mesh can make your new screen room genuinely comfortable in July rather than just a hot, bright box. A significant portion of Pomona's homes were built between the 1940s and 1970s, and older slabs sometimes need leveling or patching before a screen room frame can go up. We assess every slab during the estimate visit and price any needed repairs before you commit to anything.
The City of Pomona's permit process applies to screen rooms just like any permanent structure, and many neighborhoods in the area are governed by HOAs that require separate design approval. We know this process well and handle both applications for you. Our team serves homeowners throughout the region, including West Covina and Chino Hills, so we are familiar with the permit offices and HOA processes across the area.
We will get back to you within one business day. At the visit we measure your patio, assess the existing slab, and ask about your preferences for shade level and budget. A written quote follows within a few days.
Once you sign an agreement, we submit the permit application to the City of Pomona. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help prepare those submission materials at the same time. This stage typically takes one to three weeks.
Before the frame goes up, we confirm the slab is level and solid. Any patching or leveling is handled in a single day. You will need to clear the patio of furniture and plants before we arrive.
Most screen room installations take two to four days. The city inspector signs off after construction. Once the inspection passes, the space is yours to use immediately - no curing time required.
We visit your patio, assess your existing slab, and give you a written quote - no obligation, no sales pitch.
We prepare and submit both the city permit application and your HOA approval materials. You stay in the loop without having to manage the paperwork yourself.
We bring mesh samples to every estimate visit so you can see and feel the difference between standard and solar mesh before you decide. Getting this choice right is the difference between a room you use in July and one you avoid.
We check your existing concrete during the estimate visit and include any needed repair work in the quote before you commit. Older Pomona slabs from the 1950s through 1970s sometimes need attention - and you should know that before day one of the build.
The connection between the screen room frame and your home is the most common failure point in this type of project. We use proper flashing and fasteners at every ledger joint and show you the work before we close it up.
Screen room frames are almost universally made from aluminum. You can learn about structural aluminum standards from the Aluminum Association. For mesh performance data including UV and heat reduction by product, Phifer Incorporated publishes specifications for most mesh types used in the industry.
Take the next step from a screen room to a fully enclosed, climate-controlled living space by converting your patio with solid walls and glass.
Learn MoreA step between a screen room and a full sunroom - solid panels that provide more insulation and privacy while keeping a lighter cost profile.
Learn MorePomona's permit process takes a few weeks - the sooner you start, the sooner you are enjoying your new outdoor space.