
Turn your Palm Beach patio into a finished, bug-free, weather-protected room you can use every month of the year - built to Florida's hurricane and permit standards from day one.

Enclosed patio rooms in Palm Beach convert an existing or new outdoor patio into a fully enclosed living space with walls, windows, and a roof - giving you a comfortable, usable room that feels connected to your yard, with most active construction completed in a few days to a week of on-site work once permits are approved.
The difference between a screen room and a fully enclosed patio room is sealing. A screen room keeps bugs out but lets in heat, humidity, and rain. An enclosed patio room uses glass or solid panels to seal the space completely, so you control the temperature and can use it during South Florida's hottest months. A contractor attaches an aluminum frame to your existing home structure, installs glass panels and a roof system, and adds any electrical work for lighting or fans at the same time. Because the work happens mostly from the outside, your daily life inside the house is minimally disrupted. Homeowners who want a brighter, more glass-forward version of this concept sometimes look at a solarium installation as an alternative approach.
In Florida, an enclosed patio room is treated as a structural addition to your home - permits and inspections are required. The Town of Palm Beach has its own building department, and HOA architectural review is common on the island. We handle both from the first submission to the final sign-off, so you are not navigating that process on your own.
If your outdoor patio is only comfortable a few months out of the year because of heat, humidity, or insects, you are leaving usable space idle. An enclosed patio room turns that underused slab into a room you want to spend time in, even in July. In Palm Beach's climate, that shift from occasionally comfortable to always usable is the most common reason homeowners move forward.
Screen rooms and open patios in South Florida are a constant battle with mosquitoes and no-see-ums, especially near the water. If insects drive you inside every evening regardless of the temperature, a fully enclosed room solves that permanently. You get the outdoor light and view without anything getting through.
If your household needs a home office, a guest area, or a dedicated entertaining room and a full interior renovation feels disruptive, an enclosed patio room adds real square footage using space you already have. The framing and glazing work happens mostly from the outside, so your daily routine is minimally affected.
From June through September, Palm Beach receives heavy afternoon downpours nearly every day. If you love your patio but lose it entirely during the rainy season, an enclosed room lets you keep using that space when the rain comes down. Furniture stays dry, plants stay inside, and you can enjoy the sound of a storm without getting wet.
The right configuration depends on how you plan to use the space and what Palm Beach's climate requires. Heat rejection and storm protection are the two non-negotiable factors here. Standard single-pane glass will turn your new room into an oven in summer - insulated or low-emissivity glass keeps heat out and reduces cooling costs significantly. Impact-rated glazing adds storm protection that is either required or strongly advisable in Palm Beach County's high-wind zone. For homeowners who want a simpler, lower-investment starting point, a patio cover installation adds shade and weather protection while keeping the space open - a foundation you can build out later into a full enclosure.
For homeowners who want maximum natural light with full enclosure, a glass-roof option pairs overhead glazing with sealed wall panels to flood the space with South Florida brightness. Cooling is almost always needed - either an extension of your existing HVAC or a dedicated mini-split sized for the room. We also offer solarium installation for homeowners who want a higher glass-to-wall ratio and a more dramatic indoor-outdoor connection. During the estimate visit, we walk through every option so you choose the room that fits your home and your budget.
Sealed wall panels and a solid or glass roof with low-e glazing throughout - the most popular choice for Palm Beach homeowners who want year-round comfort.
Pairs full enclosure with hurricane-rated glass and engineered framing connections - right for homeowners in Palm Beach County's high-wind zone who want storm peace of mind.
Overhead glazing brings South Florida light into the room throughout the day - suited to homeowners who want the feel of an outdoor space with full weather protection.
Full enclosure plus a dedicated mini-split unit for independent temperature control - gives you a room that functions like any other room in your home, used every day of the year.
Palm Beach sits on a barrier island between the Atlantic Ocean and Lake Worth Lagoon, and no property on the island is far from salt water. Salt air from both sides accelerates corrosion on aluminum frames, hardware, and seals - which is why contractors who work regularly in this market specify corrosion-resistant frame coatings and marine-grade hardware as a baseline, not an option. The subtropical climate brings intense heat and humidity from late spring through early fall and near-daily heavy rain from June through September. A well-sealed enclosed patio room - with tight connections at every panel, a roof that drains cleanly, and insulated glazing - handles all of it. Homeowners in West Palm Beach face the same climate and the same rainy season, and the same glazing and sealing standards apply there.
Palm Beach buyers pay close attention to outdoor living spaces, and a well-finished, properly permitted enclosed patio room is a visible upgrade that signals a home has been thoughtfully improved. The Town of Palm Beach has strict zoning and a landmarks preservation program that governs exterior additions - the town's building department and, for many properties, the HOA architectural review board must both approve the project before construction begins. We know this process well and submit complete packages the first time, which keeps the review moving rather than bouncing back for revisions. We serve homeowners throughout the area, including in Greenacres, where enclosed patio rooms are subject to similar permit and wind-load requirements.
We visit your home, measure the existing patio, and talk through how you plan to use the room - cooling, lighting, glass options, and any extras. You leave with a written proposal covering scope, materials, timeline, and cost. We respond to all inquiries within 1 business day.
If your property requires HOA architectural approval, we prepare the drawings and submission documents and start that process first. Once approval is in hand, we file the permit application with Palm Beach's building department and manage the review - you do not have to follow up on any of it.
Framing, glass or panel installation, and roofing happen from the outside of your home, keeping your interior routine intact. Electrical work for outlets, fans, and lighting follows. We coordinate all required inspections at each stage and handle scheduling with the building department.
After finishing touches are complete, the building department conducts the final inspection. Once it passes, we walk through the room with you, demonstrate how windows and doors operate, confirm warranty terms, and hand over the permit closeout documentation that protects your home's value at sale.
We visit your home, walk through the design options, and give you a written estimate tailored to your patio, your HOA requirements, and your budget.
(561) 954-1305We carry a current Florida state contractor license, liability insurance, and workers compensation. You can verify the license through the state's online database before you sign a contract - a simple step every homeowner should take before any structural work.
We work in Palm Beach regularly and understand the town's separate building department, HOA submission requirements, and the specific wind-load and material standards that apply on this island. That experience keeps projects moving on schedule rather than stalling at the permit stage.
Every enclosed patio room we build uses glazing and framing engineered for Palm Beach County's high-wind coastal zone. Impact-rated glass and AAMA-rated aluminum framing are standard on every project. The American Architectural Manufacturers Association sets the performance standards for the products we specify.
Before any work begins, you receive a written contract covering scope, materials, timeline, and payment schedule. No verbal agreements, no surprise line items added after signing. A clear written scope is what every homeowner deserves on a project that becomes part of their home.
We build enclosed patio rooms in Palm Beach because we understand what the island's climate, permitting process, and buyer expectations require from a finished addition. Every project gets the same impact-rated materials, the same permit handling, and the same written contract. For more on the performance standards that govern the products we install, the American Architectural Manufacturers Association publishes the testing standards for the windows, glass panels, and framing systems used in enclosed patio rooms.
A solarium maximizes natural light with floor-to-ceiling glass walls and a glass or polycarbonate roof - an option for homeowners who want the brightest possible indoor-outdoor space.
Learn MoreNot ready for a full enclosure? A patio cover adds shade and weather protection while keeping the space open - a lower-cost first step that can be built out later.
Learn MoreWe handle permits, HOA submissions, and inspections - call today or request an estimate online and we will be in touch within 1 business day.