
West Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios builds custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for homeowners throughout Palm Beach Gardens, including communities inside PGA National, BallenIsles, and Mirasol. We have handled HOA architectural submittals and City of Palm Beach Gardens permits since 2017.

Palm Beach Gardens HOA communities have architectural standards that generic off-the-shelf sunroom kits rarely satisfy. A custom sunroom designed from the ground up to match your home's roofline, tile profile, and exterior finish has a far better chance of passing HOA architectural review on the first submission.
Most single-family homes in Palm Beach Gardens have a covered patio slab out back, and during Florida's summer storm season that open patio is unusable for months at a time. A patio enclosure closes off the space at a fraction of the cost of a full room addition and works with the existing foundation.
Palm Beach Gardens homeowners who want to use their outdoor space from May through October need an AC connection, not just screens. A four season sunroom with insulated glass and climate control turns a hot, humid patio into a room the family actually uses all year, including summer afternoons when the temperature reaches the low 90s.
Palm Beach Gardens winters are genuinely pleasant, and a screened enclosure lets you sit outside from November through April without bugs or afternoon wind gusts. Homes that back up to golf fairways or retention ponds at PGA National and similar communities benefit especially from screens that keep wildlife and debris off the pool deck.
Newer Palm Beach Gardens communities like Alton and Avenir have homes with open floor plans that connect naturally to the yard, making them good candidates for a true square-footage addition. Adding a sunroom that flows from the main living area adds usable heated and cooled space that counts toward the home's finished square footage.
Palm Beach Gardens homes built in the 1970s and 1980s sometimes have original sunrooms or Florida rooms that were built to older standards. Remodeling an existing structure to add better glass, updated insulation, and a proper AC tie-in can transform a barely-usable room into one of the most comfortable spaces in the house.
Palm Beach Gardens was developed primarily between the 1970s and the 1990s, and a large share of its housing stock is now 30 to 55 years old. At that age, original patio enclosures, Florida rooms, and screen structures are overdue for replacement. Stucco exteriors over concrete block creak with every temperature cycle, and the expansion and contraction caused by South Florida's wet and dry seasons creates cracks at window frames and roof transitions that let moisture behind the finish. By the time a homeowner notices a water stain on the interior ceiling, water has often been working behind the wall for months.
The dominant HOA presence throughout Palm Beach Gardens adds a layer to every exterior project that homeowners in less-regulated cities do not face. Communities like PGA National, BallenIsles, and Mirasol have architectural review boards that must approve materials, colors, and roofline changes before any permit can be pulled. The review process takes time, and a contractor who is unfamiliar with it can easily delay a project by submitting incomplete documentation. Understanding how to work within these community processes is not optional in Palm Beach Gardens - it is part of the job.
Our crew works in Palm Beach Gardens regularly and pulls permits through the City of Palm Beach Gardens Building Division. The city runs its own permit office, which means submittals go directly to the city's reviewers - not through Palm Beach County. We know the city's documentation requirements and what the plans reviewers typically flag on residential addition applications, which keeps the approval process moving without unnecessary back-and-forth.
Most of our Palm Beach Gardens work falls along the PGA Boulevard corridor and the communities that branch off it - PGA National to the west, older neighborhoods closer to US-1 on the east side, and newer developments further out toward Avenir and Alton. The homes differ in age and finish level, but the underlying construction is almost universally concrete block on slab with stucco exteriors, and that is the type of structure we work on daily. Fairway-adjacent homes and properties backing up to the water features that wind through the city's golf communities sometimes have drainage considerations that affect where and how a new slab can be poured.
We also serve neighboring Jupiter to the north and Riviera Beach to the south, covering the full stretch of northern Palm Beach County communities.
Call or submit a request online and we will follow up within one business day. We ask about your home, your goals, and any HOA community you live in so we can prepare for the site visit with the right information already in hand.
We visit your Palm Beach Gardens home, measure the space, inspect the existing slab and stucco, and review any HOA architectural guidelines you have on hand. The written, itemized estimate covers the full cost range and we walk you through every line so there are no surprises. No charge for the visit.
We prepare the HOA architectural submittal and the City of Palm Beach Gardens building permit application simultaneously. Running both processes in parallel reduces the total wait time before construction can begin. We track both submissions and respond to any reviewer questions.
Once permits and HOA approval are in hand, construction on a screen room or patio enclosure typically takes four to seven business days. Custom sunrooms and full additions take two to three weeks. We schedule the city's final inspection and walk the completed project with you before we consider the job done.
We respond to Palm Beach Gardens inquiries within one business day. Free on-site estimate, written quote, no obligation. HOA communities welcome.
(728) 226-6069Palm Beach Gardens is a city of about 57,000 residents in northern Palm Beach County, incorporated in 1959 and built out steadily through the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. It was planned from the start as a community of distinct neighborhoods, most of them HOA-governed and many of them gated. The city is anchored by PGA National Resort, home to the Honda Classic PGA Tour event, and golf courses wind through much of the western half of the city. The housing mix ranges from 1970s-era single-family homes near the US-1 corridor on the east side to luxury estates inside gated communities and newer construction in developments like Alton and Avenir further west.
Homes throughout Palm Beach Gardens are predominantly concrete block with stucco exteriors, and backyards with pools and screened enclosures are standard features across most of the housing stock. The high homeownership rate - roughly 65 to 70 percent - reflects a stable, invested community where residents plan to stay and maintain their properties. Nearby Riviera Beach to the south has a different character but many of the same CBS construction patterns, and we serve both cities throughout the year.
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Learn MoreCall or submit a request online and we will respond within one business day. Free estimates, HOA submittal support included, no obligation.