
Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios has served West Palm Beach homeowners since 2019, building sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms across the city's neighborhoods. We handle sunroom construction, additions, and conversions, and manage all permits through the City of West Palm Beach Building Division.

West Palm Beach has a wide mix of older CBS homes and newer builds, and full sunroom construction needs to be tailored to each property's structure. We build from the foundation up, using framing systems and glass that meet Palm Beach County wind load requirements.
Flat lots and warm weather make outdoor patios common in West Palm Beach, but open patios get uncomfortable fast in the wet season's afternoon storms. A screened or glass enclosure keeps the outdoor feeling while blocking rain, insects, and direct sun.
Many mid-century homes in West Palm Beach have concrete slab patios that were never enclosed. Converting that existing slab into a screened or glass-walled sunroom is one of the most practical ways to gain livable square footage without expanding your footprint.
Adding a climate-controlled sunroom to a West Palm Beach home creates year-round living space that the heat and humidity would otherwise make uncomfortable. Impact glass and proper insulation are important choices for a room that will be used during Florida's long, hot summers.
A three season sunroom is a good fit for West Palm Beach homeowners who primarily use their outdoor space during the fall, winter, and spring months. These rooms cost less than a fully conditioned addition and still provide a comfortable, bug-free space for most of the calendar year.
West Palm Beach has many homes from the 1950s through 1980s with original sunrooms or Florida rooms that have aged in the South Florida climate. Remodeling replaces corroded frames, failed sealants, and outdated glazing with materials suited to the current building code.
West Palm Beach sits on the Atlantic coast of South Florida and gets the same combination of heat, humidity, salt air, and hurricane risk that affects every coastal community in the region. The city covers a large area - roughly 57 square miles - and the conditions vary across it. Properties near the Intracoastal Waterway on the east side face stronger salt air exposure than homes further west, near areas like Grassy Waters Preserve. Flat terrain and sandy soil with a high water table mean drainage is a constant consideration, and sunroom foundations and patio slabs need to account for this from the start.
A large share of West Palm Beach's housing stock was built between the 1950s and the 1980s using concrete block and stucco construction - the standard for South Florida homes in that era. Attaching a sunroom addition to a CBS wall requires different anchoring and flashing techniques than wood-frame construction. Contractors who work primarily with newer framed homes sometimes underestimate what is involved. Florida Building Code wind load requirements for Palm Beach County apply to every structure here, and understanding the Florida Building Code requirements is not optional for contractors working in this region.
Our crew works throughout West Palm Beach regularly, pulling permits from the City of West Palm Beach Building Division and navigating the city's permit submission process for sunroom and enclosure projects across its neighborhoods. We know the main corridors - Okeechobee Boulevard, Southern Boulevard, and I-95 - and plan our crew and material logistics around the city's traffic patterns.
The city's residential neighborhoods range from older streets near downtown and Clematis Street, where original mid-century CBS bungalows and ranch homes are common, to newer developments further west toward Palm Beach International Airport and the edges of the city. We have worked on both ends of the spectrum, and we approach each project knowing that a 1960s home on the east side of town needs different site prep than a newer build on the west side.
We serve homeowners throughout the wider county, including Lake Clarke Shores to the south, a small residential enclave that borders West Palm Beach along the canal system. Whether you are in an established West Palm Beach neighborhood or on its edges, we can reach your property and get the work done.
Reach us by phone or through the estimate form on this page. We respond within one business day and ask a few basic questions about your home - construction type, approximate square footage of the space, and any known HOA restrictions - so the site visit is efficient.
We visit the property, measure the space, and note any structural or site conditions specific to your home. You receive a written estimate with line-item detail so you know exactly what you are paying for. Cost factors we review on site include foundation condition, CBS wall anchoring needs, and drainage at the slab level.
We submit all permit applications to the City of West Palm Beach and keep you updated on review status. Construction is scheduled to begin as soon as the permit is in hand, using materials selected for Florida coastal conditions and the county's wind load standards.
The city's building inspector signs off on the finished work, and we walk through the completed room with you before closing out the project. We leave the site clean and provide documentation of the passed inspection for your records.
We serve all of West Palm Beach and the surrounding communities. Call us or submit the form and we will follow up within one business day with a clear next step.
(561) 954-1305West Palm Beach is the county seat of Palm Beach County and the largest city in the county, covering roughly 57 square miles and home to around 125,000 to 130,000 residents. The city sits directly across the Intracoastal Waterway from the Town of Palm Beach, and its eastern edge runs along Lake Worth Lagoon. Clematis Street is the city's main downtown strip - a waterfront corridor of restaurants, bars, and shops that is a center of activity for residents and visitors. Okeechobee Boulevard runs east-west through the city and connects downtown to Palm Beach International Airport, which is within the city limits. I-95 runs north-south through the city and links it to Miami to the south and the Treasure Coast communities to the north.
The city's housing stock spans nearly every decade of the 20th century. Older neighborhoods near the urban core have bungalows and ranch homes from the 1920s through 1950s, while large sections of the city were built out in the 1960s and 1970s with concrete block construction. Newer residential development has pushed west toward the city's boundary with unincorporated Palm Beach County. West Palm Beach has a broad income spread across its neighborhoods - some blocks near the waterfront have high home values, while other parts of the city are more modest. For additional background on the city, the City of West Palm Beach maintains city services and planning information online. Neighboring Lake Clarke Shores is a small residential borough on the city's southern boundary that we also serve regularly.
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Learn MoreWe know West Palm Beach's neighborhoods, permits, and building conditions. Call today or send a message - we will reply within one business day and get your project moving.