
Beaumont dust, desert insects, and strong pass winds are keeping you off your deck. A screened porch solves all three, and we build them to last in this climate.

Screened-in porches and screened decks in Beaumont give you a fully usable outdoor living space that keeps bugs, blowing dust, and wind-driven debris outside. Most projects take one to three weeks of active construction, and permits are required before work begins.
If your deck has been sitting empty because evenings feel uncomfortable or mornings start with a layer of grit on every surface, a screen enclosure changes that. Many homeowners pair this work with covered decks and patio covers to get both shade and bug protection in one structure. If your existing deck needs attention first, we handle deck repair and replacement as well.
We work throughout Beaumont and the surrounding Inland Empire, pulling permits and handling HOA submissions so you do not have to chase paperwork.
If bugs, gnats, or blowing dust drive you back inside before you have finished your coffee, that is the clearest signal. In Beaumont, dust events and insects are both real seasonal problems, and a screened enclosure solves both at once.
Beaumont summers are hot in the afternoon but often comfortable once the sun drops. If wind-blown debris or insects keep you from enjoying those good evening hours, a screened porch captures exactly that time without the annoyances.
If your deck has no rot, no wobble, and no cracked boards but you rarely step on it, adding a screen enclosure is often more cost-effective than any other upgrade. The bones may already be there - you just need the enclosure.
Wiping down chairs and tables before every outdoor meal is a common complaint in the San Gorgonio Pass area. When outdoor furniture maintenance becomes a chore, it is a practical sign that an enclosed space would improve daily life in your home.
Every screened porch project starts with a clear look at what you already have. If your existing deck is solid, we build the screen enclosure directly on top of it - posts, beams, roof structure, screen panels, and a properly latching door. If you need a new deck platform first, we handle that too. For homeowners who want both shade and bug protection, we can combine a screened enclosure with covered decks and patio covers in a single build. Those who want open-air shade with a different look might also consider pergola installation as part of their outdoor space plan.
Screen material choice matters in Beaumont's climate. We use mesh rated for high UV exposure so panels do not become brittle or sag after a few summers. All framing is designed to handle the wind loads specific to the San Gorgonio Pass corridor. Permits are pulled before work starts, and HOA submissions are handled as needed for homes in Sundance, Tournament Hills, and other planned communities.
Best for homeowners with a structurally sound deck who want to add bug and dust protection without building a new platform.
Best for homeowners starting from scratch or replacing a deck that no longer qualifies for screening.
Best for homeowners who want full weather protection along with bug and dust screening in a single finished structure.
Best for homeowners with an existing screened structure where the mesh has degraded or the door hardware no longer latches correctly.
Beaumont sits in the San Gorgonio Pass, and that location creates two challenges that screened structures solve directly. Summer afternoons push past 100 degrees, but evenings often become genuinely comfortable once the sun drops. The wind that moves through the pass carries dust and debris from the desert, coating everything on an open deck. A well-built screened enclosure gives you those good evening hours back and keeps your outdoor furniture clean enough to use without wiping down first. Homeowners in Banning and Calimesa face the same wind and dust conditions and see the same benefit.
Beaumont has an active building department that enforces permit requirements for screened porches and deck enclosures, which is actually good news for homeowners. A permitted project gets a third-party inspection, creating a documented record of legal work that matters when you sell. Many of Beaumont's newer communities also have HOA design guidelines that govern what a screened structure can look like. We handle both the city permit and the HOA submission, so you are not left chasing approvals on your own. Screen material rated for high UV exposure is the right choice here - cheaper mesh becomes brittle faster under Beaumont's intense sun than it would in a coastal or northern climate.
For guidance on building standards for outdoor enclosures, the North American Deck and Railing Association and the California Contractors State License Board are reliable resources.
We come to your property, look at your existing deck or patio, take measurements, and give you a written quote. You will hear back within one business day of reaching out.
Once you agree on scope and price, we handle the city permit application and HOA submission if your community requires one. Permit review in Beaumont typically takes one to three weeks.
The crew builds the posts, beams, and roof structure first. This is the loudest phase. In Beaumont, framing is designed to handle the wind loads of the San Gorgonio Pass corridor - this phase usually takes one to three days.
After framing passes inspection, screen panels go in, doors are hung and adjusted, and trim is finished. We walk you through the completed space, show you how everything works, and answer any questions before we leave.
No obligation. We come to your home, look at your space, and give you a written estimate. Most homeowners hear back within one business day.
(951) 574-0539We frame screened structures to handle the sustained wind loads specific to Beaumont's location in the pass - not the lighter specs used in calmer inland areas. That means properly anchored posts, rated fasteners, and tensioned screen panels that stay taut rather than flap and tear.
Standard screen mesh degrades faster under Beaumont's intense sun and triple-digit heat. We use mesh rated for high UV exposure as a standard choice, not an upgrade. Screens that last longer mean fewer replacements and a porch that still looks right several seasons from now.
Beaumont's building department requires permits for screened enclosures, and many communities also need HOA architectural approval. We handle both. You do not have to track down city offices or fill out HOA paperwork - we have done this in communities across Beaumont and know what each review board typically needs.
An unpermitted screen enclosure can complicate a home sale in Beaumont's active real estate market. Every project we build is permitted, inspected, and documented. That paperwork stays with your home and gives future buyers confidence the work was done correctly.
Every screened porch we build in Beaumont comes with wind-rated framing, UV-rated screen mesh, and a fully permitted record. Those three things together mean a structure that stays comfortable, looks right, and causes no headaches when it is time to sell.
Add a solid or open-lattice roof over your existing deck or patio to block the Beaumont sun year-round.
Learn MoreOpen-beam pergolas create shade and define outdoor living areas without the full enclosure of a screened structure.
Learn MoreBeaumont's permit process takes time - the sooner we start, the sooner you are enjoying your new outdoor room. Call or request a free estimate today.