
Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios serves Lake Worth Beach with patio-to-sunroom conversions, screen room installation, and patio enclosures built to handle coastal heat and humidity. We have been working in this city since 2019, pulling permits from the local Building Division and finishing projects on schedule.

Many Lake Worth Beach bungalows and cottages have open concrete patios that bake in the heat and offer no protection from afternoon thunderstorms. A patio-to-sunroom conversion turns that neglected slab into a living space without pouring a new foundation, which saves time and keeps costs lower for owners of older homes.
Lake Worth Beach sits close to the Lake Worth Lagoon, meaning salt air and insects are constant nuisances on open patios. A screened or glass patio enclosure creates a comfortable outdoor-adjacent space without the bugs, humidity, and UV that make an uncovered patio unusable during summer months.
Screen rooms are a practical, lower-cost option for Lake Worth Beach homeowners who want shade and insect protection without the cost of a full glass enclosure. The dense urban lots common in this city mean screen rooms can make even a small side yard or rear patio genuinely usable.
Older enclosed porches on Lake Worth Beach homes from the 1940s and 1950s often have aluminum frames that have rusted, single-pane glass, and sealants that have failed. Remodeling an existing sunroom costs less than a full teardown and gives the space another generation of useful life.
For homeowners near downtown Lake Worth Beach who want to make better use of a small rear yard, an enclosed patio room adds square footage and privacy without major structural changes. These rooms work well on the small lots that are common throughout the city's historic neighborhoods.
A fully conditioned four season sunroom keeps Lake Worth Beach residents comfortable even during the hottest and most humid months. Impact glass and insulated framing hold up against the region's hurricane season while also blocking the salt air that degrades standard materials much faster here than inland.
Lake Worth Beach has one of the largest concentrations of historic cottages in Florida, with roughly 1,000 still standing in neighborhoods that date back to the 1910s through 1940s. These older wood-frame and concrete block homes have been through decades of coastal heat, humidity, and hurricane seasons. Patios and existing enclosures on these properties often sit on settled slabs, have uneven footings, or were built before modern building codes. Contractors who know these homes understand that prep work matters as much as the finished product.
The city also sits between the Lake Worth Lagoon to the east and Lake Osborne to the west. That geography means salt air and persistent moisture are present even on properties that are not directly on the water. UV exposure accelerates paint, caulk, and sealant breakdown here, and the wet season - which runs from roughly June through October - brings heavy afternoon thunderstorms that test gutters, drainage, and enclosure seals every year. The City of Lake Worth Beach Building Division handles permits for all structural additions and enclosures, including those in the six designated historic districts.
Our crew works throughout Lake Worth Beach regularly, pulling permits from the city Building Division and working on homes in the historic neighborhoods off Dixie Highway and in the quieter streets near Lake Osborne. We understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and enclosure work here, including the sandy, low-lying lots that can drain poorly after heavy summer rain.
Most of our Lake Worth Beach jobs are on residential properties in the areas surrounding Lake Avenue and the historic downtown core. Lots here are compact, access is often tight, and many homes have older concrete slabs that need evaluation before any new enclosure is attached. North and South Dixie Highway carries the main traffic through the city, and we plan deliveries and staging around the urban lot constraints that come with working in a dense, older neighborhood.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Boynton Beach to the south and Lantana just north of the city. If you are in Lake Worth Beach or anywhere in this part of Palm Beach County, we can be on your property within a day to assess your project.
Call or fill out the estimate form and we respond within one business day. Lake Worth Beach lots can be tight and access varies, so we confirm the address and any access details before arriving to make sure the site visit goes smoothly.
We inspect the existing slab, framing, and drainage around the project area and provide a written estimate with line-item pricing. We identify upfront whether your home is in a historic district and what additional review steps, if any, are required before permits can be issued.
We submit permit drawings to the Lake Worth Beach Building Division and schedule construction once approval is received. You do not need to manage the permit process yourself. The crew arrives on the confirmed date with all materials staged in advance.
After construction, the city conducts a final inspection to close the permit. We walk you through the completed space, explain maintenance for seals and screens in this coastal climate, and make sure you are satisfied before we leave the site.
We serve all of Lake Worth Beach - from the historic districts near downtown to the neighborhoods along Lake Osborne. Call or submit the form and we will respond within one business day.
(561) 954-1305Lake Worth Beach is a small, densely built city of roughly 35,000 to 40,000 residents covering about 7 square miles in Palm Beach County. The city is bordered by the Lake Worth Lagoon to the east and Lake Osborne to the west, and the Atlantic Ocean lies just beyond the barrier island. The housing stock is one of the oldest in South Florida, with approximately 1,000 historic cottages still standing in six officially recognized historic districts including College Park, Old Town, and South Palm Park. Most homes were built between the 1910s and 1960s, using wood-frame or concrete block construction typical of that era. For more on the community, see the Lake Worth Beach Wikipedia article.
Downtown Lake Worth Beach is centered on Lake Avenue, an arts-oriented commercial corridor known for its independent shops, restaurants, and the annual Street Painting Festival. North and South Dixie Highway (US 1) form the city's main commercial spine, connecting it to neighboring communities to the north and south. We serve homeowners throughout the city - from the neighborhoods near downtown to the quieter streets out toward Boynton Beach and those near the Lantana border to the north.
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Learn MoreWe serve all of Lake Worth Beach and respond within one business day. Call now or submit the form to get started.