Outdoor rooms for nine months of Seattle weather.
Pergolas, louvered roofs, sunrooms, glass enclosures, gazebos, patio covers, and outdoor kitchens. The trick in the PNW isn't building outdoor space — it's building outdoor space you'll actually use in March. We design for the rain first.
Custom Pergolas
A pergola defines an outdoor room without closing it in — overhead structure, partial shade, and a frame for string lights, climbing plants, or a retractable canopy. Done right, it makes a patio feel like an actual room.
We design pergolas in cedar, fir, or powder-coated aluminum, sized to the patio they sit on. Footings engineered for Seattle soil and wind, beams sized for the span — and detailing that holds up to decades of rain.


Louvered Roof Systems
Louvered roofs are the closest you'll get to controlling Seattle weather. Open the blades to let in summer sun, tilt them for shade, or close them flat when the rain hits — usually before you even get inside, thanks to a built-in rain sensor.
Aluminum frame, motorized louvers, integrated gutters and downspouts, and optional LED lighting and screen panels. Engineered to handle Seattle wind and snow loads.
Three-Season Sunrooms
A three-season sunroom turns a patio or deck into an enclosed, screened, partially-heated room — usable spring through fall, dry in the rain, and surprisingly bright in winter. Light frame, lots of glass, and a real connection to the yard.
We design sunrooms to attach to the existing house cleanly — matched roofline, properly flashed connection, and a permit path that works with most Seattle setbacks. Optional ceiling fans, heaters, and ceiling-mounted bug screens.


Insulated Sunrooms
An insulated sunroom is closer to a small addition than a porch — fully insulated walls and roof, double-pane windows, dedicated heat, and finished interior surfaces. It counts as conditioned square footage on most appraisals.
We design these to current energy code, with HVAC capacity tied into the house or split-unit, and finishes that match the rest of the home. The result feels like a year-round family room you can also see the yard from.
Glass Enclosures
Glass enclosures keep the view and lose the bugs. Sliding glass panels, folding walls, or frameless systems that open most of a wall to the yard in summer — and seal up tight against rain in October.
We work with tempered, laminated, and dual-pane systems depending on the use. Track sizing and waterproofing detailing are where these projects live or die — we don't cut corners on either.


Custom Gazebos
A gazebo is the destination at the back of the yard — a place to walk to, a place to sit during a light rain, and an anchor that gives the landscape a focal point. Square, hexagonal, octagonal, or shaped to fit a specific corner.
We build in cedar, fir, or a hybrid wood-and-metal frame, with cedar shingle or standing-seam metal roofs. Footings engineered for the slope, drainage routed away from the structure, and electrical run for lights and outlets.
Patio Covers
A patio cover is the most practical outdoor upgrade for a Seattle home — a solid roof over the patio that means you can still grill, dine, or sit outside when it's drizzling. Which it will be, probably, when you want to use the patio.
We build solid covers in matched-roof shingle, standing-seam metal, or insulated aluminum panels. Properly flashed where it connects to the house, with concealed gutters so rain doesn't sheet onto your shoulders.

Four steps from idea to first dinner outside.
Consultation
We walk the yard, talk through how you'd use it, and where the sun and view sit.
3D Design
Structure, finishes, and lighting modeled so you can see it before commitment.
Permits
We submit, manage corrections, and align trade coordination for MEP work.
Build
Construction with weekly updates and a 1-year workmanship warranty.
Got outdoor space in mind?
Send some yard photos, rough dimensions, and how you'd like to use the space. We'll come back with a realistic budget range, a structure recommendation, and the next step. No aggressive sales follow-up.
