
Your outdoor space should be usable in July, not just December. We build fully conditioned all season rooms designed for South Texas heat - so your family uses the room every day.

An all season room in Edinburg is a fully enclosed addition with insulated walls, a proper roof, and a heating and cooling connection - so you can use it year-round regardless of whether it is 103 degrees in July or an unexpectedly cold January evening. Unlike a basic screened porch or a three-season room, it is tied into your home's HVAC system or has its own dedicated mini-split unit, and it is built to the same standard as the rest of your house. Most projects range in scope from a modest enclosed backyard space to a large glass-walled addition that becomes the main gathering room in the home.
The distinction from a three-season room matters a great deal in Edinburg's climate. A three-season room adds glass panels but typically lacks the insulation and cooling connection needed to survive a Rio Grande Valley summer. If you already have something like that and it sits unused from May through September, an all season room upgrade - or a properly built new addition - is the answer. You can also explore how an all season room compares to a four season sunroom if you want to understand the overlap between those two categories before committing to a design.
In Edinburg, where summers push well past 100 degrees for weeks at a time, glass selection and cooling capacity are not optional details - they determine whether the room is actually livable. Every all season room we build is designed around South Texas conditions from the first conversation.
If your backyard sits unused for most of the year because the heat is unbearable outside, an all season room is the most direct fix. In Edinburg, that is more than half the year when an open or screened outdoor space becomes impractical. A fully conditioned room gives you back that space every day of the year.
If you already have an enclosed porch but it turns into an oven by mid-morning in June, it was not built for Edinburg's climate. A room without proper insulation and a real cooling connection will always lose the battle against South Texas heat. Finding out whether it can be upgraded or whether a new addition makes more sense starts with a conversation.
If your family needs more living space but you do not want to move, an all season room is one of the most cost-effective ways to add usable square footage without a full interior remodel. In Edinburg's rising market, this is an especially practical option for families who want more room without taking on a larger mortgage.
The Rio Grande Valley has persistent insects and seasonal dust that make open-air living uncomfortable. If mosquitoes, gnats, or fine dust are finding their way into your screened or partially enclosed space, a fully sealed and conditioned all season room eliminates those problems entirely. It is a quality-of-life change that residents in this part of Texas feel right away.
The right setup depends on your space, your budget, and whether your priority is connecting the room to your existing HVAC or running it independently. For most Edinburg homeowners, a fully insulated room with heat-rejecting glass and a dedicated cooling system is the practical choice - anything less tends to become unusable for the hottest months. Homeowners who want to compare this category to a related option can also look at our enclosed patio rooms page, which covers a similar scope of work with some differences in materials and finishing level.
Foundation work is determined by what is already there. If you have an existing patio slab in good condition, we assess it before building on top of it - Edinburg's clay soils can cause slabs to shift, and we address any issues in the estimate phase rather than discovering them mid-project. If a new slab is needed, we design it with local soil conditions in mind from the start. We also build four season sunrooms for homeowners who want maximum thermal performance and the most complete year-round enclosure available.
The best choice for year-round use in Edinburg - fully insulated walls and heat-rejecting glass tied into your home's existing heating and cooling system.
Ideal when your existing HVAC system is not sized to handle additional square footage - a wall-mounted mini-split cools the room independently and efficiently.
Built from the ground up on a fresh slab designed for Edinburg's clay soils, for homeowners who want to add a room where no foundation currently exists.
When your existing patio slab is in good structural shape, we build the enclosure on top of it - often a faster and more economical path to a finished room.
Edinburg sits in the lower Rio Grande Valley, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees and the sun angle is intense for most of the year. That climate creates a real problem for outdoor living: open patios and screened porches are comfortable for maybe five or six months and miserable for the rest. An all season room solves that problem permanently. The glass, insulation, and cooling work together to keep the space comfortable even when it is 103 degrees outside - which is what makes this addition genuinely useful here, not just aesthetically appealing. Homeowners across our service area, from McAllen to Mission face the same summer heat challenge and arrive at the same conclusion: a properly built enclosed room is the only outdoor addition that delivers on its promise in South Texas.
Edinburg's rapid growth has also brought a wave of newer subdivisions - many of them on clay-heavy soil that shifts with the wet and dry seasons. A slab that looks fine today can develop cracks and movement over time if it was not designed for those conditions. We account for this during every foundation phase, whether we are pouring a new slab or building on an existing one. And because many newer Edinburg neighborhoods are governed by HOAs, we ask about restrictions before the design phase and handle any required approval submissions - so you are never in the position of having work stopped because paperwork was missed. The ENERGY STAR program provides independent ratings for windows and glass that help homeowners in high-heat climates like ours compare glass performance on an objective basis.
You reach out by phone or the contact form and we reply within one business day. We ask about your space, how you plan to use the room, and whether you have any HOA restrictions - so the estimate visit is productive, not a discovery session.
We visit your home to look at the site, discuss glass and roofing options, and walk through your budget. You leave with a written estimate that breaks down the major costs - not a ballpark number that changes later.
We prepare drawings and submit the City of Edinburg building permit on your behalf. If your subdivision has an HOA, we provide the documentation their architectural review board needs. Permit review typically takes two to four weeks - we keep you updated so you are not chasing us for status.
Slab work accounts for Edinburg's clay soils. Then framing, roofing, glass panels, electrical, and HVAC follow in sequence. City inspectors visit at required stages - that sign-off is part of the process, not a surprise at the end.
Free in-home estimate. No obligation. We reply within one business day.
(956) 603-1615Every all season room we build in Edinburg uses glass and insulation rated for South Texas heat. A room that is comfortable in December but an oven in July is not a solution - it is a mistake. We specify heat-rejecting glass as a standard feature, not an upgrade homeowners have to ask for.
Every room we build goes through the City of Edinburg permit and inspection process. A city inspector verifies the structural, roofing, and electrical work before the job is closed out. That sign-off keeps your homeowner's insurance intact and your property record clean when it is time to sell.
Much of Edinburg sits on clay-heavy soil that expands when wet and contracts when dry. A slab poured without accounting for that movement will crack over time. We address soil conditions during the foundation phase - before any framing goes up - so the room stays level and gap-free for years.
Many subdivisions on Edinburg's north and west sides have active HOA rules about exterior additions. We ask about your HOA early, confirm their review process, and provide the drawings and documentation they require. No mid-project stop orders because paperwork was skipped.
Building a room addition in Edinburg is not like building in a milder climate - the heat, the soil, and the permit requirements all demand local experience. We have worked on homes across the Rio Grande Valley and know what it takes to build a room that holds up and stays comfortable here. The National Association of the Remodeling Industry is a resource we point homeowners to when they want to understand what professional remodeling standards look like - because the bar should be high when you are adding a permanent room to your home.
A permanent enclosed room built on your existing patio slab, with walls, windows, and a cooling solution suited for South Texas.
Learn MoreMaximum thermal performance with full insulation and HVAC tie-in for homeowners who want the highest level of year-round comfort.
Learn MoreEdinburg contractor schedules fill up fast - locking in your project now means your room is ready before next summer's heat. Call or get a free estimate today.