
West Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios builds enclosed patio rooms, screen rooms, patio enclosures, and sunroom additions for Lake Worth Beach homeowners. We have been serving Palm Beach County since 2017 and understand the salt-air exposure, older CBS construction, and city permit process that shape every project in this city.

The covered patios behind Lake Worth Beach CBS homes are often generous in size but sit unusable for most of the year because of heat, mosquitoes, and afternoon storms off the Atlantic. An enclosed patio room converts that dead space into a comfortable living area year-round, using impact-rated glass and proper ventilation designed for coastal South Florida conditions.
Homes within a few blocks of the Lake Worth Beach Pier and the Atlantic shoreline deal with mosquitoes and no-see-ums from the water and the Intracoastal. A screen room lets you use your outdoor space in the evenings without the insects, and the marine-grade aluminum framing we use here holds up where standard hardware corrodes.
Many older Lake Worth Beach homes have open patio slabs from the original construction that were never enclosed. Adding a patio enclosure is the most direct way to put that concrete to work as conditioned or screened square footage without touching the home's existing footprint or foundation.
Lake Worth Beach homeowners who have owned their properties for decades often want to add square footage without the disruption of a full interior remodel. A sunroom addition built from an existing wall or slab edge gives long-term residents a new living space that feels like it was always part of the house.
Salt air corrodes aluminum framing faster in Lake Worth Beach than in most inland Florida communities. Vinyl framing is immune to that corrosion and requires no repainting over its lifespan, making it a practical long-term choice for homeowners on the barrier island or within a few blocks of the coast.
Lake Worth Beach has a significant number of screen rooms and sunrooms from the 1960s and 1970s that were built before Florida updated its hurricane glazing and wind-load codes. Remodeling those rooms brings them up to current standards and eliminates a potential liability before the next storm season arrives.
Lake Worth Beach sits directly on the Atlantic Ocean and is separated from the mainland by the Intracoastal Waterway. That location means every home in the city, not just the ones on the water, is subject to salt air, high humidity, and the full brunt of any storm that moves up the coast. A large share of the city's housing stock was built between the 1940s and the 1970s, before Florida adopted the strict wind-load and glazing standards that followed Hurricane Andrew in 1992. Many existing sunrooms and screen enclosures from that era are not compliant with current Florida Building Code requirements. When the next major storm hits, an out-of-code enclosure becomes an insurance problem and a safety problem at the same time.
The city is compact, with small lots and a tight grid that limits staging space and equipment access on many job sites. Contractors who have not worked here before sometimes underestimate the access challenges, particularly in the older neighborhoods close to downtown Lake Worth Beach along Lake Avenue. Year-round humidity well above 70 percent also means that any enclosure built without proper sealing, drainage, and ventilation will develop moisture problems inside the framing or wall cavity within a few years. We design for that from the start, not as an afterthought.
Our crew works throughout Lake Worth Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Lake Worth Beach building department and are familiar with the city's review timeline and inspection process. The permit office is small and projects move at a different pace than in larger cities in the county, so we plan for that in every schedule we give clients.
The city runs roughly from the Atlantic beach and pier on the east side, across the barrier island, over the Intracoastal, and into the older mainland neighborhoods to the west. Homes on the island side face the most intense salt-air exposure and typically need marine-grade materials. Homes on the mainland side are slightly more sheltered but still deal with the humidity and the flat, low-lying terrain that pools water after heavy rain. We work in both zones and size the materials and design accordingly.
We also serve homeowners in Boynton Beach directly to the south, and we work regularly in West Palm Beach just north of here. If you have neighbors in those cities looking for the same type of work, we cover both areas.
Reach us by phone at (728) 226-6069 or through the contact form and we will respond within one business day. We ask a few basic questions about your existing patio or slab, your goals, and whether your property has any HOA requirements so we can prepare for the visit.
We visit the property, measure the space, check the existing slab condition, and review any drainage or salt-air factors specific to your location in Lake Worth Beach. The written estimate we leave with you is itemized by scope - no surprise line items after the contract is signed.
We file the permit with the City of Lake Worth Beach building department and keep you updated on review progress. Construction begins only after the permit is issued, and we schedule inspections so the project moves through each required phase without delays.
Once the city signs off on the final inspection, we do a walkthrough with you to review every element of the finished room. You do not make the final payment until you are satisfied that the work matches what was agreed on the estimate.
We serve Lake Worth Beach and all of Palm Beach County. No pressure - just a free, honest estimate for your project.
(728) 226-6069Lake Worth Beach is a small, densely built coastal city of roughly 40,000 people packed into about 8 square miles in central Palm Beach County. The city sits on the Atlantic barrier island with the Intracoastal Waterway running along its western edge, and it has a public beach, historic pier, and a well-known downtown stretch along Lake Avenue with local restaurants, galleries, and the Lake Worth Playhouse. The housing stock is among the oldest in the county, with a large share of homes built between the 1940s and 1970s in concrete block construction typical of mid-century Florida. Neighborhoods range from older bungalows near downtown to denser single-family blocks further south and smaller lots on the island side. You can learn more about the city's history at the Lake Worth Beach Wikipedia article.
Unlike the newer planned communities further west in the county, Lake Worth Beach has a mixed-use, walkable character that long-time residents value. The city has a higher percentage of renters than most Palm Beach County cities, but it also has a committed base of long-term homeowners in older properties who want to maintain and improve what they have rather than sell. Nearby Boynton Beach to the south and West Palm Beach to the north share many of the same coastal property conditions and older building stock, and we serve all three cities regularly.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
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Learn MoreWe serve Lake Worth Beach and all of Palm Beach County. Call now or submit a request and we will respond within one business day.