
Your deck already has the footprint and the framing. We enclose it into a fully air-conditioned, hurricane-rated sunroom your family can use every single day.

Deck-to-sunroom conversion in Palm Beach assesses the existing deck structure, reinforces it where needed, then adds walls, impact-rated windows, a roof system, and climate control to create a fully enclosed, livable room - most straightforward projects run six to ten weeks from signed contract to finished room.
The deck already gives you a head start. The footprint is in place and the basic framing exists - the conversion works with that structure rather than starting from scratch. Before any enclosure work begins, we do a structural assessment of the posts, beams, ledger board, and footings to confirm they can carry the added load of walls, a roof, and glazing. In Palm Beach, salt air and coastal humidity accelerate wood deterioration, so this check matters even on decks that look solid from the surface. If you are starting from a ground-level slab rather than a raised deck, our patio-to-sunroom conversion service applies the same principles to that starting point.
Because this is treated as a room addition under Florida's building rules, a permit and inspections are required. Palm Beach's building department is thorough on enclosed living space additions, and we handle the entire permit and HOA submission process as part of the project.
If your deck sits unused for most of the year because Palm Beach heat and humidity make it unbearable, a fully enclosed, air-conditioned sunroom turns that wasted square footage into a room your family uses daily. An empty deck is a missed investment every summer.
If your deck shows visible wear - faded boards, a railing that needs work, a surface that is no longer comfortable underfoot - but the underlying posts, beams, and footings are still solid, a conversion is often a smarter investment than a straight deck rebuild. You address the worn-out surface and upgrade to a far more useful space.
Palm Beach summer storms arrive fast and dump heavy rain almost every afternoon from May through October. If you love watching the rain and the garden but hate being driven inside every day, a sunroom gives you that connection to the outdoors without the exposure. Floor-to-ceiling glass brings the outside in while keeping you completely dry.
If your household needs a casual sitting area, a home office, or extra entertaining space, but a full room addition feels like too much disruption and cost, a deck conversion is a natural middle ground. The footprint is already there - you are putting walls and a roof around it.
The right type of conversion depends on how you plan to use the finished room and what Palm Beach climate demands. A basic screen enclosure is the most affordable path, but in a climate where summer heat and humidity are intense, most homeowners here invest in a fully conditioned four-season room. That means insulated framing, high-performance glazing with a low solar heat gain coefficient, and a cooling system sized for the space - either an extension of your existing central air or a dedicated mini-split unit. The difference between a room you love and one you avoid all summer comes down to those choices.
For homeowners who want to maximize year-round comfort, our all season rooms represent the highest specification option - built specifically for year-round use with full insulation and climate control. For homeowners whose deck footprint gives them a starting point for something more custom, that path can also connect to our patio-to-sunroom conversion work, where a ground-level slab is the foundation instead. We walk you through the options during the estimate visit and help you match the build to what you actually need.
The most affordable entry point - screened walls keep bugs and rain out in mild weather, without the cost of full insulation and climate control.
The best fit for Palm Beach summers - fully insulated, air-conditioned, and comfortable even on the hottest afternoons. A room your family uses every day, not just in winter.
A four-season conversion using hurricane-rated impact glass throughout - meets Palm Beach County wind standards and provides genuine storm-season protection.
Designed to match your home's architecture with premium finish materials - suited to estate properties with specific layout or aesthetic requirements.
Palm Beach is a barrier island community, surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean on one side and Lake Worth Lagoon on the other. Salt air reaches every property on the island, and that exposure accelerates corrosion on metal framing, degrades sealants faster than inland climates, and demands glazing specified for coastal conditions. Many Palm Beach decks were built from pressure-treated wood suited to the coastal environment - but even good materials age faster here, and a structural assessment before enclosure is not optional, it is essential. We check every structural element before any enclosure work begins, because surprises mid-construction are far more expensive than a thorough upfront inspection.
Palm Beach County sits in a high-wind zone, and any new enclosed structure must meet the wind and impact standards that apply here. Homeowners in North Palm Beach and Palm Beach Gardens face the same requirements, and we handle conversions across all these communities. South Florida also receives intense afternoon thunderstorms from May through October, which means proper roof drainage, flashing at the wall-to-house connection, and gutters are not afterthoughts - they are part of the design from day one.
We visit your home, look at the deck - its size, condition, how it connects to the house - and discuss how you want to use the finished room. You leave with a realistic cost range and a sense of the timeline. We respond to all inquiries within 1 business day.
Once you sign a contract, we prepare drawings, submit any required HOA or architectural review documentation, and file the building permit. Permit review timelines in Palm Beach can run several weeks - we keep you updated so the wait does not feel like a black box.
With permits approved, the crew prepares the deck structure, installs framing, windows, doors, and the roof system. In Palm Beach, this includes impact-rated glazing and framing connections engineered for the county's wind zone. This is the phase where the room takes visible shape.
Electrical connections, HVAC tie-in, interior trim, and flooring complete the room. The building department inspects at required stages - we schedule and attend all of them. After the final sign-off, we walk through the room with you and address any punch-list items before we close the project.
We assess the structure, handle the permits, and build a room that Palm Beach's climate and storm season cannot touch.
(561) 954-1305We hold a current Florida contractor license, liability coverage, and workers compensation. The license is verifiable through the state's online database - we encourage every customer to check it before signing a contract.
We build sunroom conversions across Palm Beach and the surrounding communities, and we know the local building department process, HOA landscape, and the coastal material standards that apply here. That experience keeps projects moving.
Before we propose anything, we check whether your deck can carry the added load of walls, a roof, and glazing. If repairs or reinforcements are needed, you find out during the estimate visit - not mid-construction. No surprises.
Every deck conversion we build uses glazing and framing engineered for Palm Beach County's wind zone. These requirements are not extras - they are standard on every project, built in from the first drawing.
Every project we complete in Palm Beach carries a clear permit record, impact-rated materials, and construction that meets the standards a coastal wind zone demands. You can verify our Florida contractor license directly through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation before you sign anything. For wind-load engineering standards that apply to your conversion, the American Society of Civil Engineers publishes the ASCE 7 standards that govern how structures like yours must be designed - knowing those requirements is the baseline for doing this work correctly in South Florida.
Want a room you can use every day of the year, regardless of season? All season rooms are fully conditioned with insulation and climate control built to South Florida standards.
Learn MoreWorking with a ground-level slab rather than a raised deck? A patio conversion uses the same enclosed-room principles with a different starting structure.
Learn MoreOur calendar fills during peak building season - call now to reserve your spot and we handle the structural assessment, permits, HOA submissions, and every step of the build.