Sunrooms
Est. 2002

Sunrooms That Elevate Your Home

Bring the outdoors in with beautifully crafted sunrooms that flood your home with natural light year-round.

Sunrooms
Overview

A considered approach to sunrooms

A well-built sunroom is the room people end up in by accident and stay in by choice — morning coffee, afternoon reading, evening conversations that run longer than they were supposed to. We design and build sunrooms as fully integrated parts of the home, not glorified porches.

01

Year-Round, Not Just Three Seasons

Most sunrooms get retired by November because they were built like enclosed porches — uninsulated walls, single-pane glazing, and no real connection to the home's HVAC. We build sunrooms that hold conditioned air in January and stay comfortable in August, which is what turns a fair-weather room into the favorite room in the house.

02

Glazing Chosen for Indiana's Light and Weather

Glass selection is where comfort and energy bills are decided. We specify high-performance, low-E glazing with coatings tuned to admit warming winter light while rejecting summer heat, and we balance the glass-to-wall ratio so the room feels luminous without becoming a greenhouse. The result is a room that's bright in every season and brutal in none.

03

Foundations That Won't Move

Sunrooms fail at the foundation more often than anywhere else — frost heave, settling, and inadequate footings show up as cracked tile, sticking doors, and gaps at the tie-in. We pour proper frost-depth footings and engineer the floor system so the room sits as solidly as the original house. Decades from now, the doors still close the way they did on day one.

04

Rooflines That Belong

Few additions are more obviously bolt-on than a sunroom whose roof apologizes for itself. We design rooflines that continue the home's existing slopes, eaves, and material language, so the finished room looks like it was always there. From the curb, the addition shouldn't announce itself; from inside, it should feel inevitable.

Let's Build Together

Ready to talk through your sunrooms project?

Schedule a complimentary on-site consultation. We'll listen, ask the right questions, and outline a clear path forward — no pressure, no obligation.

1632 W Defenbaugh St, Kokomo, IN 46902

05

Indoor Comfort, Outdoor Views

We orient sunrooms to capture the views worth capturing and screen the ones that aren't. That can mean lining up sightlines with mature trees, gardens, or open lawn, and using strategic solid walls to block neighbors' windows or utility areas. The view from your favorite chair is something we design as deliberately as the floor plan.

06

Heating and Cooling That Actually Reach the Room

A sunroom tied into an undersized HVAC system will be the coldest room in winter and the hottest in summer. We evaluate your existing system and recommend the right solution — extended ductwork with proper balancing, a dedicated mini-split, or radiant floor heat — so the room performs like part of the house, not a temperature exception.

07

Floors That Handle Sun and Traffic

Direct sun is hard on flooring: hardwoods fade unevenly, some LVPs warp, and certain tiles can become uncomfortably hot. We specify floors rated for sun exposure and high-traffic use, often with radiant heat underneath, so the surface is comfortable underfoot in February and dimensionally stable in July. Beautiful floors that stay beautiful.

08

Lighting for After the Sun Goes Down

Sunrooms are easy to light during the day and frequently overlooked at night. We design layered electric lighting — ambient, task, and accent — that lets the room transition gracefully from afternoon reading to evening hosting to late-night winding down. Dimmers and zoned switching let one room serve a dozen different moods.

09

A Room That Quietly Increases the Home's Value

A properly built, fully conditioned sunroom counts as living square footage and appraises accordingly, which means the room pays you back twice — every day you use it, and again when you sell. Done casually, sunrooms can subtract value; done correctly, they're one of the most rewarding additions a homeowner can make.