Solariums across San Diego County
A solarium takes the sunroom concept to its logical extreme: glass on the roof as well as the walls, flooding the space with natural light from every angle. San Diego's 265-plus sunny days per year make a solarium particularly rewarding, though thermal management and proper low-E glazing selection are essential on south and west orientations. We connect homeowners with insured local crews that build solariums to the structural and energy code requirements for sloped glass roof systems.
What's included in this service?
- Assess the site orientation, existing foundation, and structural wall to determine the correct solarium footprint and roof pitch
- Design the roof glass system with thermally broken aluminum rafters and dual-pane tempered low-E panels to meet California Building Code and Title 24
- Install the foundation, wall framing, and roof structure per the engineered drawings and local permit requirements
- Set full-height glazed wall panels and sloped roof glass with proper thermal spacers and perimeter sealant
- Install guttering and drainage at the roof perimeter to manage San Diego rain events without water intrusion
- Pull the building permit and manage the inspection sequence through structural, energy, and final sign-off
When do you need this service?
- You want a dedicated plant room, atrium, or greenhouse-style space that gets natural light from above as well as the sides
- A dark interior room could be opened up with a glass-roof solarium addition that brings light into the adjacent space
- The home has an interior courtyard or light well that could be roofed with glass to create a year-round living area
- You want the most light-filled version of a sunroom and a standard flat or gabled roof addition will not achieve it
- A conservatory-style space for art, meditation, or entertaining is the goal and the design requires a glass roof
What do homeowners ask about Solariums?
Will a solarium get too hot in San Diego's summer?
It can if the glass is not specified correctly. South and west-facing roof glass without a low-E coating will make the room very hot in summer. The crews we refer specify a low-E coating with a low solar heat gain coefficient (SHGC) for roof panels, which reduces heat gain dramatically. An operable roof vent or a dedicated mini-split keeps the room comfortable on the hottest days.
Does a solarium require a building permit in San Diego?
Yes. A solarium is a structural addition with a glass roof system and requires a building permit that covers the foundation, structural framing, glazing engineering, and California Title 24 energy compliance. Sloped glass roofs have specific engineering requirements beyond a standard gabled addition. The crews we refer pull the permit and provide the engineering documentation.
What is the difference between a solarium and a conservatory?
Both have extensive glass. A solarium typically has a flat or low-slope glass roof and a modern frame system. A conservatory uses a more traditional architectural vocabulary, often with a ridge and hip or lantern roof and more decorative structural elements. In practice the terms overlap, and what matters more is the glass specification, structural design, and thermal performance.
How much does a solarium cost in San Diego?
Solariums in San Diego County typically start at $50,000-$60,000 for a modest-size structure with standard glass and run to $120,000 or more for larger rooms, custom glass configurations, or sites with complex foundation requirements. Glass-roof systems require more engineering than standard addition roofs, which adds to the structural cost. Your crew confirms the written price after the on-site estimate.
Where do we offer Solariums in San Diego County?
We provide solariums in every city and community in San Diego County. Pick your city for local climate notes and service specifics.
See solariums in all 67 cities
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Need solariums in San Diego County?
Call for a free quote. Most work scheduled within the week.