
Stop avoiding your deck at dusk. We build screened enclosures in Stanton that keep insects out, cut the heat, and hold up through every Santa Ana season.

Screened-in porches and screened decks in Stanton, CA, enclose an existing or new outdoor space with mesh panels and a proper frame, most jobs run three to seven days of construction once permits are in hand and materials arrive on site.
A lot of Stanton homeowners find themselves with a perfectly good deck they just are not using - bugs at dusk, afternoon heat, or wind-blown debris makes it more trouble than it is worth. A screened enclosure solves all three at once. The screens let air flow through freely while blocking insects, and the right screen fabric cuts heat and glare significantly. If your deck is already structurally sound, you are not starting from scratch - you are completing something that is already there. For homeowners who want shade without full enclosure, our covered decks and patio covers are worth considering alongside this option.
Stanton sits in northwest Orange County where temperatures are mild nearly every month, so a screened porch is not a seasonal luxury here - it is a space you can realistically use ten to eleven months out of the year.
If mosquitoes or other insects drive you inside every evening, you have a perfectly good outdoor space sitting unused. In Stanton's warm climate, dusk bugs are a nightly reality from spring through fall. A screened enclosure eliminates that problem entirely without sacrificing airflow.
South- and west-facing decks in Stanton get full afternoon sun from late spring through September. Solar screen fabric can block a meaningful portion of UV and heat, bringing the felt temperature down enough to actually sit outside after noon. Standard screen alone helps, and solar fabric takes it further.
Every fall and winter, Santa Ana gusts leave a layer of dust, leaves, and debris on every unprotected patio in Orange County. A screened enclosure acts as a windbreak, keeping your furniture, cushions, and outdoor rugs far cleaner between uses. Homeowners who have dealt with a few Santa Ana seasons often say this alone was worth the investment.
If your deck was built years ago and is in good structural shape but feels exposed or uncomfortable, adding a screened enclosure is the natural next step rather than a full rebuild. This is common in Stanton's older neighborhoods, where decks from the 1970s and 1980s have held up well but were never enclosed.
We build screened enclosures from the ground up - frame, roof structure, screen panels, doors, and all the hardware needed to make the space hold up in Orange County conditions. Every build goes through the City of Stanton permit process, so the finished structure is on record as a legal, inspected improvement to your home. For decks that are close to or past their lifespan, we also offer covered decks and patio covers if a full roof rather than screening is the better fit.
We use heavier-gauge framing hardware and proper screen tensioning methods on every job because we know what happens to screens built to minimum standards when the Santa Ana winds arrive. If you have been considering a pergola installation as an alternative, we can walk you through where screening makes more sense than open lattice for your specific yard and use case.
Best for homeowners who want to enclose an open patio slab or build a new structure from scratch alongside the house.
Best for homeowners with an existing deck in good structural condition who want to add screening without a full rebuild.
Best for homeowners replacing worn or damaged screen fabric on an existing frame, including solar screen and pet-resistant options.
Best for homeowners in Stanton HOA communities who need both city permit and association approval handled together.
Stanton is in northwest Orange County, where the climate stays mild enough to use an outdoor space nearly every month of the year. That changes the math on an enclosure significantly - this is not a weekend-in-May investment, it is a space you can sit in on a Tuesday evening in October. The Santa Ana wind season adds another layer that contractors from outside the area sometimes underestimate. Frames need to be anchored and screen panels need to be tensioned for real wind load, not just cosmetic installation. We work throughout Stanton and have built screened enclosures in neighboring Anaheim, CA and Garden Grove, CA as well, so we know exactly how Orange County's seasonal conditions affect these structures.
A significant portion of Stanton's neighborhoods also fall under HOA rules, which means exterior changes need written association approval before a city permit can even be submitted. Homeowners who have had a project stall mid-process because of missing HOA paperwork know how costly that delay can be. We handle both the city permit application and the HOA architectural drawings at the same time, so both processes move in parallel rather than one waiting on the other. Many of Stanton's homes were built on compact lots in the 1950s through 1970s, and setback rules can limit where a screened structure can go - we measure every lot and check requirements before drawing up plans, so you never design something that cannot be permitted.
We reply within one business day. We will ask a few basic questions - the size of your space, whether you have an HOA, and how you plan to use the area - so we come to the estimate prepared rather than starting from scratch.
We visit your home, measure the space, check any existing deck structure, and walk through screen material and framing options. A written estimate follows within a few days - no pressure, and no obligation to move forward.
Once you sign, we apply for the city permit and prepare any HOA drawings your association requires. Permit review in Stanton typically takes two to four weeks. We run both processes at the same time so you are not waiting on one after the other.
Most builds take three to seven days. Framing and roof structure go up first, then screen panels and doors. We do a final walkthrough with you to confirm everything is tight and correct before we close out the permit.
Free on-site estimate. We handle permits and HOA drawings. No pressure, no obligation.
(657) 643-0117We have worked in Orange County since 2018 and have seen what happens to screened enclosures built to minimum standards after a hard Santa Ana event. We use heavier framing hardware and proper screen tensioning on every job because that is the only way to build something that lasts here.
Every screened porch or deck enclosure we build goes through the City of Stanton's permit process, and we pull the permit under our contractor license - not yours. That means a city inspector verifies the work, and the improvement is on record as a legal addition to your home.
A significant share of Stanton's neighborhoods have active HOA architectural review committees. We prepare the drawings and documentation those committees require as part of our standard process, and we run HOA approval and the city permit at the same time so neither process stalls the other.
The North American Deck and Railing Association sets best practices for how outdoor enclosures should be framed, anchored, and finished. We follow those standards on every project. You can review NADRA guidelines at nadra.org.
We work throughout Stanton and the surrounding Orange County cities, and we know the local permit offices, HOA processes, and weather conditions that affect how these structures need to be built. That local experience shows up in every detail of the finished project.
California requires all contractors performing this work to hold a valid state license. You can verify any contractor at the California Contractors State License Board.
A solid roof cover blocks full sun and light rain, turning your patio into a shaded space you can use all afternoon.
Learn MoreOpen-beam pergolas add structure and partial shade without enclosing the space - great for those who want a defined outdoor room.
Learn MoreStanton permit slots fill up - call today and we can get your project on the schedule before the busy season.