
Bryan Sunrooms & Patios designs and builds custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and all season rooms for homeowners in Taylor, TX. We have served Central Texas since 2017 and respond to every inquiry within 1 business day.

Taylor's housing stock ranges from 1920s pier-and-beam cottages near the historic downtown to brand-new slab-foundation homes going up near the Samsung plant corridor - and each requires a different approach when designing an addition. We build fully custom sunrooms sized and configured to match your specific home and lot. See every material and layout option on our custom sunrooms page.
Taylor summers regularly push past 100 degrees, and an all season room with insulated glass and HVAC access lets you use the space even when the thermometer is brutal. For the growing number of Taylor homeowners commuting to Austin or working from home, a year-round sunroom doubles as a home office with natural light and quiet.
Many Taylor homes already have a covered back patio, but a concrete slab sitting open in Central Texas collects heat and makes the area unusable from May through September. We enclose existing patio slabs after checking for clay-soil settling and anchor issues, so the new enclosure is built on a solid base.
Taylor's spring and fall evenings are genuinely comfortable, but mosquitoes and cedar pollen make unscreened outdoor time difficult. An aluminum-framed screen room on your existing patio slab keeps the insects out while letting the evening breeze through, and the frame is designed to handle the UV exposure common in Central Texas.
Older Taylor homes near the historic downtown square often have smaller original floor plans. A sunroom addition built on a properly engineered slab adds real square footage - particularly valuable as Taylor's rapid growth increases property values and makes every livable square foot count more.
Vinyl framing holds up well in Taylor's climate, which includes hot summers, UV intensity from May through September, and the occasional hard freeze in winter. Unlike wood frames, vinyl does not rot, warp, or require repainting, making it a low-maintenance choice for homeowners who want a long-lasting result.
Taylor presents two very different kinds of construction challenges depending on which part of the city you are in. The older neighborhoods close to the historic downtown square have homes built before 1950, many of them on pier-and-beam foundations with original wood framing and single-pane windows. Adding an attached sunroom to a home like that requires careful structural assessment so the addition does not overload aging wall plates or pull away from the original framing as the clay soil underneath shifts through wet and dry cycles. These homes are full of character, but they need a contractor who knows older construction rather than one who treats every job like a new build.
On the north and east edges of Taylor, new subdivisions are going up to house the wave of workers and families following Williamson County's rapid growth. These slab foundation homes are newer, but the Blackland Prairie clay under them still moves every season. According to USDA Web Soil Survey data, the soils around Taylor are among the highest-shrink-swell clays in Williamson County, meaning even newer slabs can develop cracks within a few years if drainage around the foundation is not managed correctly. Taylor also sits in Central Texas hail country, and any room addition must be built with roofing materials and glazing that can take a spring hailstorm without failing.
Our crew works in Taylor regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Taylor Development Services for every attached structure we build within city limits. The permit office has seen a significant increase in applications as Williamson County grows, so we factor realistic review timelines into every project schedule rather than promising a start date before the permit is approved.
Taylor is situated along State Highway 79, which connects the city to Georgetown and the I-35 corridor to the southwest and to Cameron and Milam County to the northeast. Most of the older homes we work on are within a few blocks of the historic Taylor downtown square, while the newer subdivisions we work in are clustered north of Loop 311. Murphy Park and the surrounding neighborhoods are the kinds of established, tree-lined streets where homeowners have been in the same house for decades and want the job done right.
We also cover Rockdale to the northeast, which shares Taylor's Blackland Prairie soil conditions and has a similar mix of older downtown homes and newer properties on larger lots. Homeowners between Taylor and Milam County can count on the same crew for both areas.
We respond to every new inquiry within 1 business day. You can call during any hour and leave a message, or submit a request through our contact form. Either way, you will hear back from a real person, not an automated system.
We visit your Taylor property, look at the existing structure and slab, and discuss what you want the room to do. You receive a written estimate with a cost breakdown before we pull a single permit - no obligation and no pressure to decide on the spot.
We file your permit application with the City of Taylor Development Services and notify you when it is approved. Construction typically starts within two weeks of permit approval. We do not begin framing until the permit is in hand.
After construction is complete, we schedule the city's final inspection and walk through the finished room with you to confirm everything meets your expectations. You receive all permit documentation to keep on file and share with your insurer.
We serve Taylor homeowners throughout Williamson County. Call now or submit your project details and we will respond within 1 business day.
(979) 359-2224Taylor is a city in Williamson County with around 17,000 residents, sitting about 35 miles northeast of Austin along State Highway 79. The city grew up around the railroad in the late 1800s, and the historic downtown square still anchors the older residential neighborhoods that surround it. Homes in these blocks tend to be wood-frame construction on pier-and-beam foundations, many with original wood siding and the kind of front porches that are common in early Texas residential architecture. The downtown area includes the old Williamson County courthouse annex and storefronts that date back more than a century, giving Taylor a distinctive historic character that the newer parts of the city are still growing into.
Taylor has been growing faster than most people outside Williamson County realize. Samsung's semiconductor facility is one of the largest construction projects in Texas history and has accelerated demand for housing on the north and east sides of the city, where new subdivisions are filling in quickly. That growth means Taylor now has a housing stock that spans from 100-year-old homes near the square to brand-new builds just outside the loop. Nearby Rockdale to the northeast and Cameron further up Highway 79 share similar housing characteristics and the same Blackland Prairie clay soil.
Durable patio covers that add shade and style to your outdoor space.
Learn MoreFrom older pier-and-beam homes near downtown to new slab-foundation builds in growing Williamson County subdivisions, we bring the same care to every Taylor project. Contact us today for a free on-site estimate.