
West Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios handles sunroom construction, patio enclosures, and screen room installation across Riviera Beach - from postwar CBS homes on the mainland to Singer Island properties that deal with direct salt air and ocean exposure. We pull city permits and manage every step so you do not have to.

Building a new sunroom on a Riviera Beach home requires framing methods and materials that hold up to the city's heat, humidity, and proximity to salt air. Our sunroom construction process starts with a thorough look at the existing slab and CBS wall condition before any framing begins, because problems in the foundation show up fast in a coastal climate.
Riviera Beach afternoons bring heavy summer rain that turns open patios into standing-water problems on the flat lots that dominate this city. A patio enclosure keeps the rain out and creates a usable outdoor room without the full cost of glass-wall sunroom construction.
Screened enclosures are popular in Riviera Beach because they let in the ocean breeze while keeping out the mosquitoes and debris that come with a coastal environment. For Singer Island homes and properties near the Intracoastal, we use coated aluminum framing that resists the accelerated corrosion from salt air.
Many of Riviera Beach's postwar homes have original screen enclosures or basic covered patios that were built in the 1960s or 1970s - structures that are past their useful life and often show stucco cracking, corroded framing, and deteriorated screens. A full remodel replaces all of those components and brings the space up to current Florida Building Code.
Riviera Beach's year-round warm climate means a four season sunroom gets used every month, not just in winter. Insulated glass and a proper AC connection keep the space comfortable through the humid summer months when an unventilated room would otherwise be unusable.
Vinyl framing is a practical choice for Riviera Beach homes near the water because it does not corrode the way aluminum does in a salt-air environment. For Singer Island properties and homes within a few blocks of the Intracoastal, vinyl components can meaningfully extend the life of the finished room.
A large share of Riviera Beach's housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1980s using concrete block construction - the standard South Florida building method of that era. After 40 to 70 years, the stucco on those exterior walls develops cracks from heat expansion and moisture, and those cracks become entry points for water during heavy summer rain. When an existing patio enclosure or screen room is attached to a wall in that condition, the framing connection is compromised and water infiltration is often already underway by the time a homeowner calls for an inspection.
The bigger differentiator in Riviera Beach compared to inland communities is salt air. The city sits directly on the Intracoastal Waterway, and Singer Island faces the Atlantic Ocean. Corrosion from salt spray reaches well inland and attacks standard aluminum framing, fasteners, and hardware faster than most people expect. A screen room built with off-the-shelf components that would last 20 years in a landlocked suburb may need repairs in 7 to 10 years near the water. Choosing the right materials at the start - marine-grade hardware, coated framing, proper sealants - makes a real difference in how long the finished room holds up. South Florida's rainy season, which runs from May through October and delivers five to seven inches of rain per month, adds another layer of stress on any outdoor structure that is not properly sealed and anchored.
Our crew works throughout Riviera Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Permits for Riviera Beach projects run through the City of Riviera Beach Community Development Department - the city has its own permitting process rather than using county services, which affects submission requirements and inspection scheduling. We are familiar with what the city reviewers look for on enclosed outdoor structure additions, which helps keep permit approvals on track.
Blue Heron Boulevard is the main east-west corridor through the city, connecting the mainland to Singer Island across the Intracoastal. We work on homes throughout the city - from neighborhoods near the Port of Palm Beach on the north end to Singer Island condos and single-family homes that face the ocean. The mix of property types, building ages, and proximity to salt water means every job here gets a site-specific material review rather than a standard parts list.
We also serve Palm Beach Gardens directly to the north of Riviera Beach, where newer construction and larger lots create a different set of project conditions. Knowing both communities helps us apply the right approach to each job without assuming the conditions are the same.
Call us or submit a request online and we will reply within one business day. We ask a few questions about your property type, location in the city, and what you are hoping to build so we can plan the estimate visit effectively.
A crew member comes to your Riviera Beach home to measure the space, assess the slab and wall condition, and note any salt-air or drainage factors that affect material choices. You receive a written, itemized estimate with no pressure and no obligation.
Once you approve the estimate, we submit the permit application to the City of Riviera Beach and provide a realistic schedule. City permit review for residential additions typically takes one to three weeks, and we keep you informed at each stage.
Our crew completes all construction and coordinates required city inspections. When the work is finished, we walk through the completed space with you to confirm the quality and address any questions before closing the job.
We serve all of Riviera Beach - mainland neighborhoods and Singer Island. One call gets you a written quote and a straight answer about timeline and materials.
(728) 226-6069Riviera Beach is a city of about 35,000 people in northeastern Palm Beach County, sitting along the Intracoastal Waterway with direct access to the Atlantic Ocean via Singer Island - a barrier island that is part of the city. The city grew primarily during South Florida's postwar boom, and the majority of its single-family homes are one-story CBS ranch houses built between the 1950s and 1980s. Singer Island adds a distinct character to the city, with a concentration of oceanfront and Intracoastal-facing condominiums built in the 1970s and 1980s, as well as smaller single-family homes on tight oceanside lots. The Port of Palm Beach sits within the city and is a major employer and landmark that shapes the industrial and working character of the city's north end.
Riviera Beach borders some of Palm Beach County's wealthiest communities - Palm Beach is directly across the Intracoastal, and Palm Beach Gardens lies to the north - but Riviera Beach has its own distinct identity as a working-class community with longtime owner-occupied households and homes that have real equity and maintenance history. Many residents have owned their homes for decades, and the combination of aging postwar construction and coastal climate conditions creates steady demand for exterior improvements, including sunroom and patio enclosure work. We also serve West Palm Beach just to the south, and we understand how building conditions in these adjacent coastal communities compare.
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Learn MoreCall today or submit a request online. We respond within one business day and serve all of Riviera Beach, including Singer Island properties.