
SunTerrace Torrance Sunrooms builds four season sunrooms, encloses patios, and remodels existing structures for homeowners in Redondo Beach, CA. We have served South Bay coastal neighborhoods since 2025, using marine-rated materials that hold up to salt air, and we respond to every inquiry within one business day.

Redondo Beach homes sit right on Santa Monica Bay, and a room that is not properly sealed against salt air and coastal moisture will deteriorate faster than homeowners expect. Our four season sunrooms use thermally broken frames, low-E glass, and marine-grade hardware specifically chosen to handle the conditions that come with living this close to the water.
Redondo Beach lots tend to be compact, and most single-family homes have a covered patio that goes unused much of the year because the ocean wind makes it uncomfortable. Enclosing that space with glass panels turns it into a sheltered room that still captures the coastal light without the chill.
Many Redondo Beach homes from the 1960s and 1970s have enclosed patios built with original aluminum frames that have heavily corroded from decades of salt air exposure. Remodeling that space replaces the corroded components with current materials and makes the room weathertight again.
Redondo Beach evenings are among the most pleasant in Southern California, but the ocean breeze and insects keep some homeowners from fully enjoying an open patio. A screened room filters the bugs and breaks the wind while keeping the fresh coastal air moving through the space.
For Redondo Beach homeowners who want a bright, glassy room that feels connected to the outdoors without the added cost of full insulation, a three season sunroom is a practical choice. The mild coastal climate here means a three season room is comfortable for the majority of the year.
High-value Redondo Beach homes, particularly those in South Redondo near the Esplanade, are well suited to a glass solarium that maximizes natural light and frames the view. A properly designed solarium with a glass roof and walls captures the coastal light that makes Redondo Beach living desirable in the first place.
Redondo Beach is a fully built-out city where almost every home in the housing stock is at least several decades old. The bulk of the single-family and multi-unit construction went up between the 1950s and 1980s, which means original roofing, plumbing, and exterior materials are common findings. For sunroom work specifically, that aging housing stock presents a consistent challenge: patio enclosures built in that era used materials that were adequate for inland California but were not designed for a home sitting within a few blocks of the Pacific Ocean. Salt air accelerates corrosion on bare aluminum, untreated fasteners, and standard window hardware at a rate that catches many homeowners off guard. A contractor who works regularly in coastal communities understands which products hold up in this environment and which ones will need replacement again within a few years.
The mix of property types in Redondo Beach adds another layer of complexity. North Redondo has a significant number of condos and townhome complexes built in the 1970s and 1980s, many of which are governed by HOAs that have specific rules about exterior modifications. South Redondo has more single-family homes with direct ocean proximity, where salt air exposure is most intense. A contractor who has worked in both parts of the city understands the difference between a straightforward single-family patio enclosure and a project that requires HOA approval and shared-wall coordination. Getting the permit and approvals right before work starts is essential here.
Our crew works throughout Redondo Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We file permits with the Redondo Beach Building and Safety Division and are familiar with the residential plan check requirements for enclosed structures, including the additional considerations that apply to properties in HOA-governed complexes.
Redondo Beach is divided into distinct neighborhoods that each have their own character. South Redondo is the coastal side, with single-family homes closer to the water and the well-known stretch of the Esplanade running along the beach. North Redondo is denser, with more condo and townhome clusters and a mix of property types that runs inland toward Torrance. From homes a block from the Redondo Beach Pier to neighborhoods near Riviera Village, we know the difference between the two sides of this city and what each one typically requires from a sunroom standpoint.
We also serve neighboring Hermosa Beach, CA, which borders Redondo Beach to the north and shares the same coastal exposure and housing character. If your project is near the city line, the same crew and the same material standards apply.
We respond within one business day. We ask a few quick questions about your space and goals so we arrive at your Redondo Beach home ready to give you a real assessment, not just a rough ballpark.
We visit your property, measure the space, and check the existing structure and slab. The written estimate covers all materials, labor, permit fees, and any coastal-specific hardware - no surprises after the fact.
We file permits with the City of Redondo Beach and, where applicable, prepare the documentation needed for HOA review. Redondo Beach residential permits typically process in three to five weeks.
Our crew completes the work and handles all required city inspections. We do a final walkthrough with you before closing the job - final payment is not due until you are satisfied with what was built.
We serve Redondo Beach homeowners with free on-site estimates and materials rated for coastal conditions. We respond within one business day.
(424) 318-3952Redondo Beach is a coastal city in Los Angeles County with about 67,000 residents sitting directly on Santa Monica Bay. The city divides naturally into two distinct parts: South Redondo, which is closer to the water and dominated by single-family homes and higher property values, and North Redondo, which has more condominiums and townhomes mixed into the residential fabric. The Redondo Beach Pier and King Harbor are the most recognized landmarks in the city, drawing visitors and serving as a gathering point for residents who have lived here for years. The Esplanade runs along the ocean in South Redondo and is a defining feature of the coastal neighborhood. You can learn more about the city at the City of Redondo Beach website.
The housing stock in Redondo Beach is almost entirely built out - there is very little open land left, and new construction is uncommon. Most homes were built in the postwar decades, and keeping older homes maintained and upgraded is an ongoing need for homeowners here. Property values are high, with median home values well above a million dollars, and owners invest in their properties accordingly. Riviera Village in South Redondo is a well-known local shopping and dining district that anchors the neighborhood south of the pier. The adjacent beach cities of Lomita, CA to the southeast share some of the same South Bay character, and we serve that area as well.
Screened enclosures that keep bugs out while letting fresh air in.
Learn MoreGlass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreOur crew serves Redondo Beach with coastal-rated materials and free on-site estimates. Call now or submit a request and we will respond within one business day.