Picture a space where light dances across your floors, a seamless connection between your home and the outdoors. Four Seasons Sunroom in Hauppauge, NY designs conservatories that are not just additions, but extensions of your lifestyle. Why settle for a standard room when you can have a luminous retreat?
Hear from Our Customers
Four Seasons Sunroom builds conservatories that reflect your personal style and enhance your home’s architecture. In Hauppauge, the right materials are essential. We select thermally efficient composite materials and robust, double-glazed panels to provide comfort and durability. These choices are made to withstand NY’s varying weather. Our aim is to create conservatories in Hauppauge that are both beautiful and functional.
Ready to get started?
Imagine a space filled with natural light, perfect for relaxation or entertaining in your Hauppauge home. With Four Seasons Sunroom, you can transform your living space. We bring experience and a commitment to quality to every project. Don’t delay adding value and enjoyment to your home. Contact Four Seasons Sunroom, and let’s begin planning your ideal conservatory.
The first house in greater Hauppauge, according to historian Simeon Wood, dates as far back as 1731, being located on what would be the Arbuckle Estate, and later the southeast corner of the Hauppauge Industrial Park, near the intersection of Motor Parkway and Old Willets Path. The settlement of Hauppauge proper commenced with the family of Thomas Wheeler prior to 1753, at the present-day location of the BP gas station between Townline and Wheeler Road. The locale would take the Wheelers’ name as its own until the 1860s when the name Hauppauge was restored. On March 13, 1806, “a meeting of the male members of the Methodist Society of the ‘Haupogues’ was convened at the School House agreeable to public notice for the express purpose of Incorporating and Electing Trustees for said Society.” The first trustees elected at the meeting presided by Timothy Wheeler and Issac Wheeler were Issac Nichols, Elkanah Wheeler, George Wheeler, and Samuel Brush. They were known as the “Trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church and Congregation of the Haupogues”. In 1812 the Hauppauge Methodist Church that stands today was constructed on land donated by the Wheeler family.
Hauppauge gained significance as a waypoint on the King’s Highway, laid out by the colonial legislature of New York in 1702. The present-day right of way departs westward from Route 111 as Conklin’s Road or Half Mile Road, passing St. Thomas More Roman Catholic Church before terminating at the border between Smithtown and Islip. Hauppauge was effectively split between the towns of Smithtown and Islip in 1798 with the survey of New Highway, or what is now known as Townline Road (County Route 76).
Learn more about Hauppauge.Local Resources