
Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios has been building custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Riviera Beach homeowners since 2019, covering both the mainland neighborhoods and Singer Island properties. We pull permits through the city Building Division and use materials rated for the salt air and storm exposure that comes with living on the Atlantic coast.

Riviera Beach properties vary dramatically - from mid-century concrete block homes on the mainland to oceanfront condos and bungalows on Singer Island. A custom sunroom is designed specifically for your home's footprint, foundation, and salt-air exposure level, so the finished room looks intentional and performs long-term.
Open patios in Riviera Beach face direct Atlantic exposure and are often unusable during the wet season. A screened or glass patio enclosure gives you a protected outdoor-adjacent space that handles insects, afternoon thunderstorms, and the salt air that corrodes unprotected metal on open patios over time.
Screen rooms are one of the most cost-effective ways to extend usable outdoor space in Riviera Beach. They block insects and cut direct sun without the full cost of a glass enclosure, and they work well on the smaller lots common throughout the mainland neighborhoods.
Fully insulated four season sunrooms work year-round in Riviera Beach, where temperatures stay warm even in winter. Impact glass and reinforced framing make them resistant to the wind and rain that Atlantic-facing properties see during hurricane season, which matters more here than it does for homes just a few miles inland.
Adding a sunroom to a Riviera Beach home increases livable square footage without a full room-and-foundation build. The mid-century homes throughout the mainland often have rear yards with room for an attached addition, and an enclosed, conditioned space adds everyday value in a city where outdoor heat and humidity limit how long you can stay outside.
Older enclosed porches and sunrooms on 1950s and 1960s Riviera Beach homes often have corroded frames, failed sealants, and single-pane glass that offers no storm protection. Remodeling an existing space is almost always less expensive than tearing it down and rebuilding from scratch, and it brings the structure up to current Florida Building Code.
Riviera Beach is split between a mainland section and Singer Island, a barrier island peninsula separated by the Lake Worth Lagoon. Both sides of the city live close to tidal water, and salt air is a daily reality for every homeowner here. Salt accelerates corrosion on aluminum frames, metal fasteners, gutters, and any exposed hardware at a rate that surprises homeowners who moved here from inland communities. Materials and installation methods that work fine twenty miles west of the coast fail noticeably faster in Riviera Beach without proper specification.
Much of the city's residential housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1970s using concrete block construction. After five or six decades of Florida heat, humidity, and storm seasons, many of these homes have settled slabs, aging drainage, and exterior surfaces that need attention before a new enclosure can be safely attached. Flood zones are also a real factor here: much of Riviera Beach sits near sea level, and properties near the lagoon and the Port of Palm Beach waterfront are in FEMA-designated flood zones with specific construction elevation requirements.
Our crew works throughout Riviera Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and enclosure work on both sides of the lagoon. Blue Heron Boulevard is the main east-west corridor through the city and the road most of our deliveries follow when heading toward Singer Island. Crossing to the island side means accounting for bridge timing, and we plan our material drops and crew schedules accordingly.
The mainland neighborhoods we work in most often sit between Blue Heron Boulevard and the northern city limits, where the housing stock is primarily mid-century single-family homes on modest lots. Singer Island work involves a different set of conditions - tighter access, direct ocean exposure, and in some cases, condo association requirements that affect material choices and work hours. Landmarks near the city that give us geographic reference include Rapids Water Park to the west and the Blue Heron Bridge corridor heading out to the island.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring North Palm Beach to the north and Mangonia Park to the southwest. If you are anywhere in Riviera Beach, call us and we will get back to you within one business day.
Call or submit the estimate form online and we respond within one business day. For Singer Island properties, we confirm bridge access and any condo association contact requirements before scheduling so there are no surprises on arrival.
We inspect the existing foundation, drainage, and salt-air exposure level at your property and give you a written estimate with itemized costs. If your property is in a flood zone, we identify the relevant elevation requirements before pricing the project so there are no cost surprises after the permit is issued.
We submit all permit drawings to the Riviera Beach Building Division and manage the approval process. Once permits are issued, we schedule the construction start, pre-stage materials, and complete the work with the crew assigned to your project from start to finish.
After construction is complete, the city conducts a final inspection to close out the permit. We walk you through the finished space, review maintenance recommendations for the coastal climate, and ensure the space meets everything outlined in the original estimate.
We serve all of Riviera Beach - from Singer Island to the mainland neighborhoods near Blue Heron Boulevard. Call or submit the form and we respond within one business day.
(561) 954-1305Riviera Beach is a mid-size city of roughly 35,000 to 40,000 residents in northeastern Palm Beach County, covering under 10 square miles of fully urban land. The city is divided into two distinct parts: a mainland section with predominantly mid-century residential neighborhoods, and Singer Island, a barrier island peninsula separated from the mainland by the Lake Worth Lagoon. Singer Island is known for its oceanfront condominiums, resort properties, and access to the Atlantic via Blue Heron Bridge - one of the most well-known shore-diving sites in the country. For more background on the community, see the Riviera Beach Wikipedia article.
Blue Heron Boulevard (State Road 708) is the civic and commercial spine of the city, running east from the mainland across to Singer Island and passing City Hall along the way. The Port of Palm Beach sits on the city's waterfront, giving Riviera Beach a mix of industrial, commercial, and residential land uses uncommon in most nearby communities. We work across all parts of Riviera Beach, and we also serve homeowners in adjacent North Palm Beach to the north. If your property is anywhere in this part of Palm Beach County, we are close by and ready to help.
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Learn MoreWe serve all of Riviera Beach - both the mainland and Singer Island. Call now or fill out the form and we will respond within one business day.