
West Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios builds patio enclosures, screen rooms, and custom sunrooms for homeowners across Royal Palm Beach. We know the CBS construction, HOA approval process, and Palm Beach County permit requirements that come with every job in the western communities.

Most Royal Palm Beach homes sit on flat slabs with open patios that collect mosquitoes and afternoon rain from June through October. A patio enclosure turns that space into a protected outdoor room without the cost of a full sunroom addition.
Royal Palm Beach families spend a lot of time outdoors in the cooler months, and a screened enclosure keeps bugs, leaves, and light rain out while letting the breeze in. The aluminum framing we use is rated for Palm Beach County wind loads, which matters in a county that sees tropical storm conditions most years.
With many Royal Palm Beach homes built in the 1980s and 1990s on large-lot subdivisions, there is often room at the back of the house to add real square footage with a sunroom addition. An addition that connects to your existing living space adds value and gives you a room you can actually use year-round.
Royal Palm Beach summers are too hot for an open patio from May through September, and an all season room with insulated panels and AC gives you the space back. These rooms are built to Florida energy codes so they do not turn into heat traps.
Planned community subdivisions in Royal Palm Beach often have specific architectural guidelines about materials and roof lines. Custom sunroom designs can be matched to your home's existing profile to satisfy HOA review boards while still delivering the space you want.
Many Royal Palm Beach homes have an existing covered patio that can be upgraded to a fully enclosed room at less cost than building from scratch. The existing roof structure and slab become the foundation for the new walls, making the conversion efficient and less disruptive to your yard.
Royal Palm Beach was built out primarily between 1980 and 2005, which puts most of its housing stock squarely in the 20-to-45-year age range. That is the window when original patio enclosures and screen rooms reach the end of their useful life. Aluminum framing corrodes at the base where it sits against concrete, screen fabric degrades from years of intense Florida UV exposure, and the fasteners that anchor the structure to the CBS walls weaken from moisture cycling behind the stucco. What looks solid from across the yard can already be letting water in during a heavy summer storm.
Royal Palm Beach also sits well inland from the coast, but the climate here is still firmly South Florida. Afternoon thunderstorms roll through almost daily from June through September, and the flat terrain means water pools against foundations rather than running off. High water table conditions are common throughout this part of Palm Beach County, which is why proper slab drainage is something we check before any new framing goes in. The village also falls under Palm Beach County building jurisdiction, and county wind-load requirements for enclosed outdoor structures are stricter than many homeowners expect, especially on anything larger than a basic screen room.
Our crew works throughout Royal Palm Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The western communities corridor - from Royal Palm Beach through Wellington and into the surrounding unincorporated areas - is an area we cover consistently, and the CBS slab homes that fill these subdivisions are the type of construction we work on every week.
Permits for Royal Palm Beach projects run through the Palm Beach County Building Division since the village uses county services rather than its own municipal building department. That process adds a step compared to cities with their own permit offices, and understanding the county submittal requirements helps keep approvals from being delayed by minor paperwork issues. Royal Palm Beach Commons Park anchors the center of the village, and the subdivisions that surround it represent the bulk of our work here - well-kept suburban homes where owners have real equity and want the job done right.
We also work in nearby Greenacres and throughout the rest of western Palm Beach County, so we understand how building conditions and permit processes differ across the area.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and we will respond within one business day. We gather basic details about your home and what you are looking to build so we can plan the site visit efficiently.
A crew member visits your Royal Palm Beach home to measure the space, check the slab condition, and review any HOA guidelines you have. We leave you with a written, itemized estimate - no pressure, no obligation.
Once you approve the estimate, we submit the permit application to the Palm Beach County Building Division and give you a realistic timeline. County review for residential additions typically takes two to four weeks, and we keep you updated at each stage.
Our crew handles all construction and scheduled county inspections. When the work is complete, we walk through the finished space with you to confirm everything meets the spec and answer any questions before we close the job.
We serve all of Royal Palm Beach and the western communities. No obligation - just a written quote and a straight answer about what your project will take.
(728) 226-6069Royal Palm Beach is a village in western Palm Beach County with a population of around 40,000 people. It was developed as a planned community starting in the 1960s, and most of its growth came during the Florida suburban boom of the 1980s and 1990s. The housing stock reflects that history: the majority of homes are single-family CBS houses on slab foundations with organized subdivision layouts and, in many cases, active homeowners associations. Royal Palm Beach Commons Park serves as the recreational center of the village, with sports fields, walking paths, and a dog park that families throughout the area use regularly.
The village sits in the western communities corridor alongside Wellington and its famous equestrian and polo community, and neighbors the more rural areas of the Acreage and Loxahatchee to the west. The community has a strong owner-occupancy rate, meaning most residents have lived in their homes for years and invest in upkeep and improvements rather than just minimum maintenance. For homeowners looking to add usable outdoor living space, the flat lots, slab construction, and mild winters here make patio enclosures and sunrooms a practical and popular upgrade. We also serve nearby Palm Springs and other communities throughout Palm Beach County.
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