
Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios serves Palm Beach Gardens homeowners with sunroom design, patio enclosures, and screen room installation built for the city's planned communities and gated neighborhoods. We have been working in this area since 2019, navigating HOA requirements and pulling city permits so the process runs smoothly from the first call to the final inspection.

Palm Beach Gardens gated communities often have HOA guidelines that govern roof pitch, materials, and exterior finishes for any addition. Our sunroom design process starts with those community standards so the finished plans are ready to submit to both the HOA and the city Building Division without a revision loop.
South Florida sun and afternoon thunderstorms make open patios uncomfortable for most of the year in Palm Beach Gardens. A screened or glass patio enclosure turns that space into something usable through the wet season while protecting the slab and the home's exterior from UV and storm exposure.
Palm Beach Gardens homes vary widely in layout and lot configuration, from golf course fairway lots to villa-style homes on narrow footprints. A custom sunroom is sized and designed around what the existing structure and the HOA will allow, so the result fits the home rather than forcing a stock product onto an irregular space.
A screened room is often the right choice in Palm Beach Gardens communities where HOA setback rules limit how far an addition can extend, or where a homeowner wants insect and shade protection without a full glass enclosure. Screen rooms are also a practical lower-cost option on homes where the patio slab is in good condition and the goal is comfort, not climate control.
Homes built in the 1980s and 1990s across Palm Beach Gardens often have rear patios or lanai areas that were designed for outdoor furniture but now sit underused. Adding a sunroom addition converts that area into conditioned living space and increases the usable square footage of the home without a full addition project.
Palm Beach Gardens gets intense heat and humidity from May through October, and a four season sunroom keeps the space comfortable all year with insulated glass and a proper HVAC connection. Impact-rated glazing also satisfies the Florida Building Code requirements that apply to all new enclosures in this hurricane-zone city.
Palm Beach Gardens covers roughly 55 square miles and includes a large number of gated and master-planned communities, many of them built around golf courses. That planned-community character means that adding any outdoor living structure - even a screen room - requires working through an HOA approval process before a city permit application can move forward. The review timelines, material restrictions, and design standards vary from one community to the next. A contractor who has not worked in these neighborhoods before can easily lose weeks to a revision cycle that could have been avoided with the right upfront preparation.
The city also sits close enough to the Atlantic that salt air affects exterior materials throughout the area. Homes built in the 1980s and 1990s - the majority of Palm Beach Gardens' housing stock - are at the stage where original screen enclosures, patio covers, and roof-over structures have weathered past their useful life. Florida's intense UV exposure and daily summer thunderstorms accelerate that wear cycle. The City of Palm Beach Gardens Building Division handles permits for all structural additions and enclosures, and compliance with the current Florida Building Code - including hurricane load requirements - is mandatory on every project.
Our crew works throughout Palm Beach Gardens regularly, pulling permits from the city Building Division and working on homes in both gated and non-gated neighborhoods across the city. We know the difference between working on a fairway lot near PGA Boulevard and a home in a western community off the Florida Turnpike - both are in Palm Beach Gardens, but the lot conditions, access, and HOA requirements can be very different.
Most of our Palm Beach Gardens projects are on concrete block homes with stucco exteriors, built in the 1980s and 1990s. We are familiar with the HOA approval process in this city and have submitted plans for communities throughout the area. PGA Boulevard is the main route we use to move between the eastern and western neighborhoods, and landmarks like PGA National Resort and The Gardens Mall help us orient when scoping a new job site. Customers in planned communities should plan for the HOA review step before filing with the city - we handle the documentation and follow up directly.
We also serve homeowners to the south in Palm Beach and in North Palm Beach just to the south of the city. Call or submit an estimate request and we will respond within one business day.
Reach us by phone or the online estimate form and we respond within one business day. Let us know if you are in a gated community so we can factor HOA review time into the project schedule from the start.
We visit your Palm Beach Gardens home, assess the existing slab or foundation, review any HOA design guidelines for your community, and provide a written estimate with a clear cost breakdown. No commitment required at this stage.
We prepare the HOA packet and submit it to your association, then file for the city permit once approval is in hand. We track both processes and update you at each step so nothing stalls unexpectedly.
Construction begins once the city permit is issued. Most homeowners do not need to be present for the majority of the work. After the city inspector signs off, we do a final walkthrough with you and address any open items before the job is closed.
We serve all of Palm Beach Gardens, handle HOA paperwork and city permits, and respond to every estimate request within one business day.
(561) 954-1305Palm Beach Gardens is a city in northern Palm Beach County covering roughly 55 square miles between I-95 and the Atlantic coast. The city was developed as a planned community starting in the 1960s and is home to well over 50,000 residents. Much of the residential land is organized into gated and master-planned neighborhoods, many of them surrounding golf courses. The housing stock runs from modest ranch-style homes and villas to large estate properties, with the majority built between the 1970s and 2000s. PGA Boulevard is the main east-west commercial corridor connecting I-95 to the coast, and PGA National Resort is one of the area's most recognized landmarks. You can find city permitting and code information through the City of Palm Beach Gardens.
The Gardens Mall near PGA Boulevard is a central retail anchor for residents throughout the northern county. Healthcare is a major employer in the city, alongside the golf and hospitality industry that has defined the area since its founding. The city draws both year-round residents and seasonal homeowners, which means demand for outdoor living improvements stays consistent across the calendar. Neighboring North Palm Beach sits directly to the south, and Palm Beach is a short drive further south along the coast - both communities we serve regularly.
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Learn MoreWe know the city, know the HOA process, and can have an estimate ready for your Palm Beach Gardens home within one business day of your call.