
West Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios builds patio covers, screen rooms, enclosed patios, and custom sunrooms for Delray Beach homeowners across Kings Point, Lake Ida, Tropic Isle, and neighborhoods throughout the city. We have been serving Palm Beach County since 2017 and reply to every inquiry within one business day.

Delray Beach patios face intense afternoon sun from April through October, making many outdoor spaces uncomfortable for most of the year. A properly installed patio cover blocks direct solar heat and rain while keeping the outdoor feel, giving homeowners in neighborhoods like Tropic Isle and Lake Ida a shaded space that is actually usable year-round.
Mosquitoes and no-see-ums are a real problem in Delray Beach, especially in neighborhoods close to canals and low-lying areas near the water table. A screen room installed with heavy-gauge, wind-rated mesh lets you enjoy the outdoor air without insects, and it holds up through the tropical storms that move through Palm Beach County every summer.
Many Delray Beach homes from the 1960s and 1970s have open concrete slab patios that were never enclosed because the original owners used them seasonally. Enclosing that slab with impact-rated glass panels adds a room that older seasonal homes were not built with, and it costs significantly less than a ground-up addition because the footprint and slab already exist.
Delray Beach has a large number of homes where a sunroom was added years ago and now leaks, has single-pane glass that makes the room unbearably hot, or has framing that does not meet current Florida Building Code wind-load standards. Remodeling that existing room brings it up to code and makes it functional again rather than a storage area or a room the family avoids.
Salt air blows inland from the Atlantic Ocean throughout all of Delray Beach, not just the neighborhoods closest to the beach. Vinyl framing resists that salt-air corrosion far better than aluminum, which means a vinyl sunroom holds its appearance and structural integrity longer without needing repainting, resealing, or frame replacement.
Delray Beach homeowners who are full-time residents - as opposed to seasonal snowbirds - often add a climate-controlled sunroom to get genuine year-round use out of the space. With low-e glass and a connected HVAC system, a sunroom addition in Delray Beach can be comfortable even during the hottest weeks of July and August when outdoor spaces are otherwise unusable.
Delray Beach sits on flat, low-lying land just a few feet above sea level, with sandy soil and a water table that can rise to within a few feet of the surface after heavy summer rains. This affects every outdoor structure - footings and slabs that drain well in other parts of the country can heave, settle, or accumulate moisture here. Any patio enclosure or sunroom addition has to account for these conditions from the foundation up. A contractor who does not ask about your drainage situation before building on your slab is likely to create problems that show up within a few years.
The other issue that is particularly sharp in Delray Beach is the large share of homes that were built for seasonal use and are now being used as full-time primary residences. A lanai screened in the 1970s for a snowbird who visited in winter was not built for someone who needs the space to perform year-round in Florida's summer heat and humidity. Updating those older structures to current Florida Building Code standards - which became significantly stricter after Hurricane Andrew in 1992 - is one of the most common jobs we handle in Delray Beach. You can read more about the current standards at the Florida Building Code portal.
Our crew works throughout Delray Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Delray Beach Building Department and are familiar with the plan submission requirements and inspection process for enclosure and addition projects within city limits.
Delray Beach is a city of distinct neighborhoods, each with its own character and housing stock. The area near Atlantic Avenue and downtown has older concrete block homes from the 1950s through 1970s that often have existing lanais or patios in need of updating. Communities like Kings Point and Delray Villas are large age-restricted developments where HOA approval is a required step before any permit application. West of Military Trail, you find newer construction with different framing and slab configurations. We come prepared for what we are going to find in each part of town.
We also serve homeowners in Boca Raton to the south and Boynton Beach to the north, covering the full coastal stretch of Palm Beach County between those cities.
Call or submit the online form and we will get back to you within one business day to schedule an on-site visit. We do not require you to know exactly what you want before calling - that is what the visit is for.
We visit your Delray Beach home, assess the existing slab or foundation, check the roof attachment point, and review any HOA requirements you need to satisfy. The estimate we provide covers all costs - materials, labor, permitting, and inspections - so there are no surprises after you sign.
We submit plans to the City of Delray Beach Building Department and schedule your project to start as soon as the permit is approved. We keep you updated on the permit timeline so you know when to expect crews on-site.
After construction is complete, we schedule the final city inspection and walk through the finished space with you to confirm everything meets your expectations and passes inspection. You get documentation of the closed permit before we consider the job done.
We serve homeowners across all of Delray Beach - from Atlantic Avenue to Military Trail and beyond. Call or submit the form and we will get back to you within one business day.
(728) 226-6069Delray Beach is a city of about 70,000 people on Florida's southeast coast, positioned between Boynton Beach to the north and Boca Raton to the south. The city has a strong sense of local identity, with Atlantic Avenue serving as its main street - a stretch lined with restaurants, shops, and year-round street activity that runs from the Intracoastal Waterway all the way to the beach. The neighborhoods closest to Atlantic Avenue and Old School Square contain some of the city's oldest homes, many built in the 1950s through 1970s using concrete block construction that is now reaching 50 to 70 years of age.
A significant portion of Delray Beach's residents are retired or semi-retired, with large communities like Kings Point serving thousands of homeowners in age-restricted settings. Many residents split their time between Delray Beach and a northern home, spending winters here and summers elsewhere - a pattern that creates specific maintenance challenges for homes that sit empty for months at a time. West of I-95 and along Military Trail, the housing stock shifts to newer construction from the 1980s through 2000s, with different roof styles and slab configurations than the older coastal neighborhoods. For more on the city's history and character, the Delray Beach Wikipedia article provides a solid overview. Our team also works in nearby Boca Raton, where the property types and HOA requirements present similar considerations.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
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