
Your patio slab is already there. We enclose it with walls, windows, and the right cooling so you stop avoiding the space in summer and start using it every day.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Burbank takes your existing concrete patio slab and encloses it with framed walls, windows, and a roof to create a livable indoor room. Most projects take one to three weeks of active construction once permits are approved, and the result is a fully usable space - not just a covered patio that bakes in summer heat.
BSP Burbank Sunrooms and Patios handles the entire process: slab assessment, permit submission to the City of Burbank, construction, city inspections, and final walkthrough. If you are starting from a deck structure rather than a flat slab, see our deck-to-sunroom conversion page for how that process differs.
Burbank's combination of intense summer heat and a specific city permit process shapes every patio conversion we do here. Choosing a contractor familiar with both - the local climate demands and the Burbank Building Division timeline - saves you weeks and prevents the most common issues before they happen.
Burbank regularly sees temperatures above 95 degrees from June through September, and an open or lightly covered patio becomes too hot to use. If you walk past your patio furniture for months without sitting down, the space is not working for you. A properly cooled sunroom turns that dead zone into one of the most-used rooms in your house.
If your patio sees occasional spring and fall use but nothing more, you are sitting on potential living space that is not earning its keep. Many Burbank homeowners convert that square footage into the home office, playroom, or reading room they have been trying to carve out of existing bedrooms.
Cracks and minor settling in a patio slab do not necessarily mean you need a full replacement, but they do mean now is the right time to address it. A sunroom conversion includes a slab assessment, and minor repairs can be folded into the project. Waiting until the damage worsens makes repairs more expensive and the conversion more complicated.
If your patio connects directly to your living room or kitchen through a sliding glass door, the space already feels like it wants to be part of the house. A sunroom conversion makes that connection permanent and comfortable, so the flow of your home feels intentional rather than incomplete.
The right conversion type depends on how you plan to use the room and what Burbank summers mean for your comfort threshold. A basic three-season enclosure protects you from bugs and rain but will not hold up against San Fernando Valley heat in July. A fully insulated, climate-controlled room costs more upfront but is the only version most Burbank homeowners will actually use all year.
We also handle the full permit and inspection process for every conversion, producing documented square footage that appears in city records. If you want to explore what a finished enclosed outdoor space looks like before committing to full construction, see our enclosed patio rooms page for design options at varying levels of enclosure.
Works well for homeowners who want protection from bugs and rain but are comfortable tolerating Burbank's milder spring and fall weather without full climate control.
Fully insulated and connected to a cooling and heating system - the right choice for Burbank homeowners who want to use the room comfortably from June through September.
A dedicated mini-split or ductwork extension keeps the room at a set temperature year-round, independent of your main home HVAC system.
Every conversion includes full permit management through the City of Burbank, producing a documented, inspected room that adds genuine square footage to your home records.
Burbank sits in the San Fernando Valley, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 95 degrees and the geography traps heat in ways coastal Los Angeles neighborhoods do not experience. A sunroom without proper insulation and air conditioning will be unusable from June through September - exactly when you want to use it most. That is why every conversion we build here is designed around heat management from the start, not treated as an optional upgrade. Homeowners in Glendale and Pasadena face similar heat and permit challenges, and we serve both cities.
Burbank also has a significant share of homes built between the 1940s and 1970s, and many of the patio slabs attached to those homes are just as old. Cracks, uneven settling, and drainage issues that developed over decades are common in this housing stock. We assess the slab honestly before quoting any price, because discovering a structural problem after construction begins is the most expensive way to handle it. The City of Burbank also requires permits for any enclosed addition, and we manage that process from application to final sign-off.
Reach out by phone or the form below. We respond within 1 business day to schedule a free on-site estimate with no obligation or pressure to commit.
We visit your home, inspect the patio slab for cracks and drainage, measure the space, and walk through your options. You receive a written estimate before signing anything.
We submit permit drawings to the City of Burbank and handle HOA approval if your neighborhood requires it. This window - typically a few weeks - is a good time to finalize window styles and flooring choices.
Work starts with slab repairs if needed, then framing, windows, roofing, electrical, and finishes. City inspectors check the work at required stages. We do a full walkthrough with you before closing the job.
Free on-site estimate, no commitment required. We assess your slab, explain the permit process, and give you a written quote you can compare fairly against anyone else.
(747) 291-7068We submit permit applications to the City of Burbank Building Division and schedule all required inspections on your behalf. You receive final documentation that the work was inspected and city-approved - paperwork that protects you at resale.
Burbank's older housing stock means patio slabs from the 1940s through 1970s are common. We inspect every slab for cracks, settling, and drainage before quoting - so the number you sign is the number you pay, without structural surprises mid-project.
We specify low-emissivity glass and recommend dedicated cooling on every conversion so your new room stays comfortable during Burbank's 95-plus-degree summer afternoons - not just in October.
We walk you through a week-by-week schedule before a single nail is driven. You know what to expect at each stage and when city inspectors will visit, so there are no surprises about access to your home or yard.
Every detail above comes down to one thing: you should never have to wonder whether the work was done correctly. When BSP Burbank Sunrooms and Patios finishes your conversion, you have a city-inspected, documented room and a contractor you can call if anything needs attention. Verify any California contractor license on the California Contractors State License Board website before you sign anything.
Convert an existing deck structure into a fully enclosed, permitted sunroom with walls, windows, and a roof.
Learn MoreEnclosed patio rooms offer a finished indoor-outdoor transition space with flexible design options for your backyard.
Learn MoreBurbank permit seasons fill up fast - locking in your start date now means your sunroom is ready before next summer's heat arrives.