
Custom sunroom design for South Florida homes - built for the heat, hurricane standards, and HOA requirements that Palm Beach demands.

Sunroom design in Palm Beach, FL covers planning the size, shape, and purpose of a new enclosed addition, selecting the right glazing and framing for South Florida conditions, and managing permits and HOA review, with most projects completed in eight to sixteen weeks from signed contract to final walkthrough.
The design process starts with a site visit where we measure your space, talk through how you want to use the room, and identify any constraints from your lot, your roofline, or your HOA. From there, a set of drawings takes shape - covering the foundation, framing, glazing, and roof system. In Palm Beach, the glazing decision is the most consequential one you will make. High-performance glass that blocks heat and ultraviolet light keeps the room usable in summer and protects your furniture from fading. Single-pane or low-quality glass turns a sunroom into an oven by mid-morning on a July day. If you are considering a simpler option first, a vinyl sunroom offers a durable, lower-maintenance frame suited to Palm Beach's coastal salt air.
Because a sunroom is a permanent addition under Florida's building code, permits and inspections are required at multiple stages. Palm Beach also has HOA and historic preservation requirements that cover a large share of properties on the island. A good contractor handles all of that paperwork on your behalf so you are not chasing approvals while the project sits idle.
If your patio or yard is genuinely uncomfortable from May through October because of the heat, humidity, and afternoon storms, a sunroom solves that. Palm Beach's summer climate is beautiful to look at and brutal to sit in - a well-designed, air-conditioned sunroom gives you that connection to the outdoors without the weather working against you.
Many Palm Beach homes have limited sight lines to the pool or garden. If you want to feel connected to your landscape without being exposed to the elements, a sunroom with large glass panels on three sides creates that connection in a way no interior room can.
If you already have a screened enclosure but find it too hot in summer, too exposed during storms, or not comfortable enough year-round, replacing it with a proper sunroom is a natural next step. Many Palm Beach homeowners make this upgrade when they decide they want a space that functions as a true room.
A sunroom is one of the most cost-effective ways to add a usable room to your home without the complexity of a full interior addition. If you find yourself wishing for a dedicated reading room, a casual dining space, or a home office with natural light, a sunroom can fill that role.
The right sunroom design depends on how you want to use the space and what your home's site and HOA allow. For Palm Beach homeowners, the most important design question is conditioning - whether the room connects to your home's air conditioning or stands on its own. An unconditioned three-season room costs less upfront but will be uncomfortable for much of the year. A fully conditioned four-season room stays usable every month, and that distinction drives both the design and the permit scope. If you want the highest level of customization, a custom sunroom is designed from the ground up around your specific roofline, yard orientation, and HOA requirements.
Every design we produce uses glazing and framing specified for coastal Palm Beach County conditions - impact-rated glass where required by code, corrosion-resistant framing, and a roof connection engineered to meet Florida's wind-load standards. No generic catalog layouts. The National Fenestration Rating Council publishes standardized performance ratings for glazing, and we use those metrics when specifying glass for every project.
Designed for mild weather use without full conditioning - a practical starting point for homeowners who want an enclosed space with lower upfront cost.
Fully insulated and connected to your home's HVAC system - the right choice for Palm Beach homeowners who want a room that is genuinely comfortable from June through September.
Shaped to your home's roofline, HOA requirements, and yard orientation - ideal for estate properties or any site where a standard layout will not work.
Palm Beach sits on a narrow barrier island between the Atlantic Ocean and Lake Worth Lagoon. No property on the island is far from salt water, which means every building material you choose faces an accelerated wear environment. Metal framing that works fine inland rusts out in coastal air. Glazing seals that last fifteen years in a northern climate may need attention in five. Sunroom design here requires materials and specifications that are rated for that environment, not adapted from a catalog designed for the Midwest. Homeowners in West Palm Beach face similar salt-air exposure across the Intracoastal, and the same material standards apply.
Palm Beach also enforces strict building and zoning rules, and a large share of properties are governed by HOAs or subject to landmark review. The town requires permits for any permanent exterior addition, and the local building department reviews plans carefully - particularly for wind-load compliance. Homeowners in Palm Beach Gardens also navigate HOA review on many developments, so the design and approval process is similar. Florida's building code requires state-licensed contractors for this type of work, which you can verify through the state licensing system before signing any contract.
We visit your property, take measurements, and talk through size, style, glazing options, and whether the room will be air-conditioned. You receive a detailed written proposal after this visit. We reply to all inquiries within 1 business day.
Once you approve the design, we prepare drawings and specifications. If your property is HOA- or landmark-governed, we prepare and submit those documents first - this step can take days to weeks depending on your association's review schedule.
We submit the permit application and manage the plan review process on your behalf. Once approved, the crew prepares the site, pours the slab, and sets any required footings. This is the most disruptive phase for your yard, typically a few days.
Framing goes up, followed by glass panels, windows, doors, and the roof system - all built to Florida's wind-resistance standards. Inspections happen at key stages. After finishing details are complete, we do a full walkthrough and hand over warranty documentation.
No pressure, no obligation - just a site visit, a conversation about what you want, and a written estimate.
(561) 954-1305We hold a current Florida state contractor license, general liability insurance, and workers compensation coverage. You can verify the license through the state's online licensing system before you sign anything - and every Palm Beach homeowner should.
Palm Beach has its own building department and many of its properties are HOA- or landmark-governed. We work in town regularly, know what each approval step requires, and prepare submissions that keep your project on schedule rather than stalling in review.
Every sunroom we design uses glazing rated for Palm Beach County's coastal, high-wind environment. The National Fenestration Rating Council sets standardized performance metrics for the glass we specify, and we provide documentation showing exactly what you are getting and why it was chosen.
Before any work begins, you receive a written contract covering materials, scope, timeline, and payment schedule. No verbal agreements, no surprise line items after signing. That transparency protects you when a project becomes a permanent part of your home.
Every one of these proof points matters more in Palm Beach than in a typical market. The island's strict permitting, coastal materials requirements, and HOA landscape mean that a contractor who skips any one of these steps can leave you with a project that stalls in review or costs more to fix than it did to build.
Vinyl-framed sunrooms resist coastal salt air and require less maintenance than aluminum or wood - a durable option for Palm Beach's oceanside environment.
Learn MoreCustom sunrooms are designed from scratch around your specific lot, architecture, and HOA rules - not adapted from a standard catalog layout.
Learn MoreOur schedule fills quickly heading into the busy season - call or submit a request now to get your project on the calendar.