
West Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios builds sunroom remodels, patio enclosures, screen rooms, and custom sunroom additions for Boynton Beach homeowners. We know the city building permit process, the HOA documentation that many communities here require, and the wind-load and moisture standards that make or break a sunroom in South Florida's coastal climate.

Boynton Beach has a large number of sunrooms and screen enclosures built in the 1970s and 1980s that no longer meet current Florida building code for glass ratings, wind resistance, or insulation. A sunroom remodel brings the room up to current standards, adds real energy efficiency, and gives you a space that performs through hurricane season instead of becoming a liability.
Boynton Beach homeowners close to the inlet deal with mosquitoes and no-see-ums nearly year-round. A properly installed screen room lets you sit outside in the evening without the bugs, and the aluminum framing we use is rated for South Florida wind loads so the screening stays intact through the storm season.
The concrete slab patios behind Boynton Beach ranch homes are often larger than the homes' interior rooms but go unused because of heat and afternoon thunderstorms. Enclosing the patio with glass or screen panels gives that square footage a purpose without a full addition-scale investment.
Boynton Beach homeowners who have lived in their homes for 20 or 30 years often want to add usable square footage without the disruption of a full interior renovation. A sunroom addition built off an existing wall or over a patio slab is one of the most cost-effective ways to expand without moving.
Many Boynton Beach HOA communities have specific requirements for exterior colors, materials, and roof profiles. A custom-designed sunroom can be built to match your HOA's guidelines from the start, reducing the chance of a revision request from the architectural review board after construction has already begun.
Boynton Beach's proximity to the Atlantic means salt air is a constant factor for any exterior material. Vinyl framing does not corrode the way aluminum does in a coastal environment, making it a practical long-term choice for homeowners near the coast or the Boynton Beach Inlet.
A large share of Boynton Beach's housing stock was built during the Florida growth boom of the 1960s through the 1980s. Those homes are now 35 to 60 years old, and many have sunrooms or screen enclosures from that same era that were built before Florida updated its building code after Hurricane Andrew in 1992. The older glass is not impact-rated, the framing often does not meet current wind-load requirements, and the insulation - if any exists - is inadequate for modern energy standards. Bringing these rooms up to code is not a cosmetic project; it is a structural one that affects whether your home is insurable and whether the room can safely withstand the next major storm.
Boynton Beach's large retired population also creates a specific pattern: homeowners who have been in their properties for decades and are now looking to update, not sell. These are long-term owners who want the work done right the first time and do not want to repeat it in five years. The high humidity year-round - average relative humidity stays above 70 percent for most of the year - means that moisture management inside a sunroom is as important as the structural build. A room without proper sealing and ventilation will develop mold in an attic or wall cavity within a few years, regardless of how solid the framing looks. We address that in the design phase, not after the fact.
Our crew works throughout Boynton Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Boynton Beach Planning and Zoning Division and are familiar with the city's review process and typical turnaround times. If your project requires a variance or a separate HOA approval, we have navigated that process before and can guide you through what to expect.
Boynton Beach runs from the Atlantic Ocean and the Boynton Beach Inlet on the east side to the expanding western communities off Boynton Beach Boulevard. The properties closer to the coast deal with more salt-air exposure and tighter lot configurations, while the western communities tend to have more open lots and newer HOA guidelines. We adjust materials and approach based on which part of the city the home sits in - the same design does not work equally well near the water and several miles inland.
We regularly serve homeowners in Delray Beach just to the south and Lake Worth Beach to the north. If you have a neighbor in either city looking for the same work, we cover those areas as well.
Call us directly or fill out the estimate form on this page. We respond within one business day and can typically schedule a site visit within the same week - no long wait times, no call center.
We come to your home at no cost, review the existing slab or foundation, check the proposed attachment point, and talk through your goals. Cost comes up in this conversation - not after you have already committed to a direction.
We prepare and submit the City of Boynton Beach building permit application. If your community has an HOA, we help you assemble the architectural review materials. Construction starts only after the permit is in hand.
Our crew works through framing, glass installation, and finishing with city inspections at each required stage. After the final inspection passes, we walk the finished room with you before closing out the project.
We serve all of Boynton Beach - from the neighborhoods near the inlet to the western communities off Congress Avenue. Response within one business day, no obligation.
(728) 226-6069Boynton Beach is one of the larger cities in Palm Beach County, with roughly 80,000 residents and a housing stock that reflects decades of South Florida growth. The dominant home style is the single-story concrete block ranch, built on a slab foundation - practical, durable, and common in neighborhoods on both sides of Federal Highway. Many of these homes were built between 1960 and 1990, which means they are now old enough to need significant exterior updates but too well-built to warrant replacement. The city sits directly on the Atlantic coast, with the Boynton Beach Inlet connecting the Intracoastal Waterway to the ocean - a landmark most residents know well from fishing and boating.
Boynton Beach also has a significant population of long-term residents and retirees, many of them in 55-plus communities like Leisureville. These are homeowners who have been in their properties for 20 or 30 years and are now focused on updating and maintaining - not relocating. A large portion of the city's neighborhoods are governed by HOAs, which means any exterior addition requires both a city building permit and community approval before work can begin. We serve homeowners in Delray Beach to the south and Lake Worth Beach to the north, both of which share many of the same property types and conditions.
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Learn MoreHurricane season puts real pressure on older sunrooms and screen enclosures. If yours is overdue for an update, get an honest estimate before the next storm season arrives.