Westminster Sunrooms & Patios has been serving Orange County homeowners since 2019, and we work regularly in Stanton on patio-to-sunroom conversions, screen rooms, and patio covers built for the postwar ranch homes that make up most of this city. Every project is fully permitted and sized for Stanton's small lots and dense neighborhood layout.

Most Stanton homes have a concrete patio slab out back that was poured when the house was built in the 1950s or 1960s. Converting that existing slab into a real enclosed room is almost always the most cost-effective way to add livable square footage on a small Stanton lot. See the full details of our patio-to-sunroom conversion service, including how we assess the existing slab before quoting.
Stanton evenings from late spring through early fall bring comfortable temperatures - but the gnats and mosquitoes follow the warmth. A screen room on your existing patio slab gives you protected outdoor living without the insects, without a major structural change, and without the cost of a full enclosure. On Stanton's single-story ranch homes, screen rooms typically go in cleanly without disrupting the rest of the house.
Stanton's summer sun is relentless from May through October, and a south- or west-facing patio without cover is often too hot to use from midday on. A patio cover - in aluminum, insulated panel, or wood - shades the space and brings it back into daily use without requiring a full enclosure. It is also a practical first step for homeowners who eventually want a full room but want to start with shade and work up.
Stanton's rainy season runs from November through March, and an open patio slab becomes useless - or a muddy mess - during heavy rain periods. An enclosed patio room with solid walls and a weathertight roof lets you use that space year-round regardless of the weather. On Stanton's dense blocks where back yards are small, a well-built enclosed room can meaningfully change how the home functions day to day.
Vinyl-framed sunrooms hold up exceptionally well in Stanton's climate - the frames do not rust from coastal humidity, do not crack in dry summer heat, and do not need repainting year after year. For Stanton homeowners who want a cost-effective, low-maintenance enclosed space without the upkeep demands of wood framing, vinyl is a practical and durable choice.
Some Stanton homeowners want more than a converted patio - they want a fully permitted room addition that becomes part of the home's permanent footprint and appraisable square footage. Sunroom additions on Stanton properties require careful attention to the existing foundation, setback requirements, and neighbor proximity given the small lot sizes throughout most of the city.
Stanton is one of the smallest and most densely populated cities in Orange County - roughly 3.1 square miles with around 38,000 residents. Most of the city was built out between 1950 and 1975, which means the overwhelming majority of its single-family homes are now 50 to 70 years old. At that age, the concrete flatwork around these homes - driveways, patio slabs, sidewalks - is well past its expected lifespan. Before any permanent sunroom structure goes onto an existing slab, that slab needs a real assessment, not a quick glance. Contractors who skip that step are setting up homeowners for expensive problems once the project is underway.
Stanton's lot sizes are small, and that creates real constraints on how materials are delivered, staged, and built. Side yard access is often just a few feet wide, and neighboring homes are close. Any contractor working here needs to plan for those tight conditions from the start - not discover them on installation day. Stanton also sits in the northwest corner of Orange County, directly in the path of Santa Ana wind events that can push 50 mph or more in strong years. A sunroom that is not properly anchored at the connection points will show that weakness the first time a major wind event rolls through.
Our crew works throughout Stanton regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Permit applications for room additions go through the City of Stanton building department, and we handle that paperwork directly on Stanton projects - submitting plans, responding to review comments, and scheduling inspections without putting that burden on the homeowner.
Stanton sits between Anaheim to the east and Garden Grove to the south, with Buena Park to the northwest. The city is easy to reach via the 22 and 91 freeways, and our crew knows the streets well - from the residential blocks near Stanton Central Park on Katella Avenue to the quieter neighborhoods along the Garden Grove border. The housing stock is consistent throughout most of the city: single-story ranch homes on small lots, built during the postwar boom, with stucco exteriors and concrete slab foundations that have been doing their job for 60-plus years.
We also serve the communities surrounding Stanton. If you have a neighbor or family member who needs sunroom work in Anaheim or in Garden Grove, we are in both of those cities regularly.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and tell us what you are thinking - type of project, where on your property it would go, and any budget range you have in mind. We will ask about your patio slab condition, the age of your home, and whether you have an HOA. No pressure, no sales pitch on the first call.
We come to your Stanton property, look at the existing slab or foundation, assess access conditions on your lot, and discuss the options that actually make sense for your space and budget. If we see slab issues or setback constraints that will affect the project, we tell you before you commit - not after the permit is pulled.
We submit the permit application to the City of Stanton, handle any review responses, and schedule the inspection visits. You do not need to track the permit status or call the building department yourself. Once the permit is approved, we schedule your build and keep you updated on the timeline.
We walk through the finished room with you, confirm everything functions as expected, and handle the final city inspection. We do not consider a job done until the inspector signs off and you are satisfied with what was built.
We serve Stanton homeowners with permitted sunroom and patio work. Free on-site estimates, no pressure.
(657) 364-0879Stanton is a small city in the northwestern corner of Orange County, covering just 3.1 square miles. With a population of around 38,000 people, it is one of the more densely populated cities in the county - roughly 12,000 people per square mile. The city was largely built out during the postwar suburban boom between 1950 and 1975, and most of its residential neighborhoods consist of single-story ranch homes on modest lots. Stanton City Hall on Katella Avenue anchors the civic center, and Stanton Central Park near City Hall is the most recognizable community gathering space. Despite its small footprint, the city sits at a geographic crossroads - Anaheim to the east, Garden Grove to the south, and Buena Park to the northwest - which makes it easy to serve and easy to reach from any direction in this part of the county.
The residential character of Stanton is defined by practical homeownership. Most homes were built for function, not showmanship - small lots, concrete driveways, attached garages, and stucco exteriors that have been doing their job quietly for decades. Homeowners here tend to make value-focused decisions about repairs and upgrades. The most popular sunroom and patio projects in Stanton are those that put underused outdoor space to better use - converting an existing patio slab into a protected room, adding a shade cover that makes the backyard livable in summer, or building a screen room that works on cool evenings without the bugs. We also serve homeowners in Westminster, which borders Stanton to the south and has a very similar postwar housing stock.
Call today or submit a free estimate request - we respond to Stanton homeowners within one business day and do not charge for the on-site visit.