
West Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios serves Palm Springs, FL homeowners with patio-to-sunroom conversions, screen room installations, patio enclosures, and full sunroom additions. We have worked throughout Palm Beach County since 2017 and understand the village permit process, the postwar CBS homes common throughout Palm Springs, and what South Florida's heat and humidity demand from any new enclosure.

Palm Springs' ranch-style homes from the 1950s through 1970s were typically built with attached covered concrete patios that have sat unused for most of the year because of heat and afternoon thunderstorms. A patio-to-sunroom conversion uses the existing slab as the foundation for a fully enclosed room, which keeps costs down compared to a ground-up addition and gives the new room a clean, integrated look that suits the low-profile ranch architecture common here.
Palm Springs gets pounded with afternoon rain from June through September, and the flat village terrain means water sits on patios and lawns rather than draining away quickly. A properly framed aluminum screen room protects the patio from rain and mosquitoes at a lower cost than a glass enclosure, making it a practical first step for homeowners who are not ready for a full sunroom project.
Many older Palm Springs homes have covered concrete slabs along the back or side of the house that are functional but exposed to weather. Enclosing that space with glass or screen panels gives you a weatherproof room that works year-round, and on the smaller lots typical in the village it is often the most sensible way to add usable space without an elaborate new addition.
Palm Springs' winters are mild and genuinely enjoyable, and a three season sunroom gives you a glass-enclosed space that is comfortable from October through April without the added cost of full climate control. For homeowners who primarily want to use the space during the dry season and do not need the room to function in the heat of July and August, this is an efficient and cost-effective option.
An enclosed patio room is a step between a screen room and a full climate-controlled sunroom - it provides solid walls and glass panels for weather protection without the full HVAC integration of an all season room. For Palm Springs homeowners on tight budgets who want more protection than a screen provides but are not ready for a fully conditioned space, this is a practical middle ground.
Some Palm Springs homes already have an older sunroom or Florida room addition from the 1970s or 1980s that is now showing its age - cracked jalousie windows, corroded aluminum framing, or failed seals letting moisture in. Remodeling the existing room rather than tearing it out completely can preserve the permitted footprint and save significant cost, while bringing the space up to current standards for weatherproofing and energy performance.
The Village of Palm Springs is a small, built-out community with almost no undeveloped land left. Nearly all construction activity here is renovation and repair on existing homes, the majority of which were built between the 1950s and the 1980s. That means contractors working in Palm Springs are almost always dealing with older CBS construction - stucco over concrete block - where the original aluminum windows, jalousie panels, and screen framing from the 1960s and 1970s are well past their useful life. Replacing or enclosing around that aging structure requires specific knowledge: how to anchor into CBS block without cracking it, how to seal the transition from new framing back to old stucco, and how to assess whether an existing slab is level and draining properly before any new structure goes on top of it.
Palm Springs sits about five to six miles from the Atlantic, close enough that salt-influenced humidity accelerates corrosion on metal framing and fasteners even here inland. That is one reason why older aluminum enclosures in Palm Springs fail faster than homeowners expect - the coastal air is harder on metal than most people realize until they see corrosion at every fastener point. Choosing the right materials for a new enclosure, and sealing it correctly from the start, makes the difference between a room that lasts 30 years and one that starts having problems within a decade.
Our crew works throughout Palm Springs regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Palm Springs has its own municipal government - the Village of Palm Springs - with its own building department and permit review process, separate from the neighboring cities of West Palm Beach and Lake Worth Beach. We pull permits directly through the village and know the typical timeline for residential enclosure project review.
South Military Trail is the main road running through Palm Springs and the street most residents use for daily errands. The residential streets spread out east and west from it - quiet, flat blocks of single-story ranch homes on modest lots, most with attached carports or single-car garages and concrete back patios. We work in all of these neighborhoods and see the same construction patterns throughout the village: low-pitched roofs, CBS walls, slab-on-grade foundations, and original concrete patios that are often the right starting point for an enclosure project.
Palm Springs sits directly between Greenacres and Lake Worth Beach, and we serve all three communities. Homeowners on the north side near the Greenacres border can see our Greenacres service area page for reference, and those on the south side near the Lake Worth Beach boundary will find similar work documented on our Lake Worth Beach page.
Call us at (728) 226-6069 or fill out the contact form on this site. We respond to every inquiry within one business day and schedule an on-site visit at a time that works for your household.
We visit your Palm Springs property, measure the existing patio or enclosure area, check the slab condition and drainage, and assess the wall attachment point. The estimate we leave you with is written, itemized, and free - no pressure, no surprise fees.
Once you approve the project, we submit the permit to the Village of Palm Springs Building Department. We handle all paperwork and follow up with the village - you do not need to make any calls or visits to the permit office.
Our crew completes the installation, schedules the village inspection, and walks you through the finished room before leaving the site. The job is not done in our eyes until the permit is officially closed and you are satisfied with the result.
We serve Palm Springs homeowners throughout the village. Free on-site estimate, no pressure, and a response to your inquiry within one business day.
(728) 226-6069Palm Springs is a small village of about 24,000 people in central Palm Beach County, tucked between West Palm Beach to the north and Lake Worth Beach to the south. The village is almost entirely residential, with a narrow commercial strip along South Military Trail and quiet single-family streets filling everything else. Most homes are single-story concrete block ranch-styles built between the 1950s and 1980s, sitting on small to medium lots with flat yards and attached concrete patios. About half of housing units are owner-occupied, and the community has a diverse, working-class character with many long-term residents. The village government, the Village of Palm Springs, manages local services including building permits for residential work.
Because Palm Springs is completely surrounded by other municipalities, there is essentially no new residential development happening here. All contractor work in the village involves existing homes - renovations, repairs, and additions to the postwar housing stock that fills nearly every street. That makes it a community where homeowners who invest in their properties stand out, and where a well-done patio conversion or sunroom addition adds real value in a market of older homes. Neighboring Lake Worth Beach to the south has a similar older housing stock, and we serve both communities with the same approach to CBS construction and village permitting.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
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Learn MoreWe respond within one business day and serve Palm Springs and the surrounding Palm Beach County area. Call or fill out the form to get started.