
Stop losing your patio to summer heat and rain. We convert your existing concrete slab into a cooled, enclosed sunroom you can use every month of the year.
Stop losing your patio to summer heat and rain. We convert your existing concrete slab into a cooled, enclosed sunroom you can use every month of the year.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Greenacres means building a framed structure on your existing concrete slab, then enclosing it with impact-rated windows, a finished ceiling, and an exterior door to create a livable indoor space. Most projects take two to six weeks of construction once permits are approved, adding real square footage to your home without starting from scratch.
Many Greenacres homeowners reach a point where an open or screened patio simply does not work for most of the year. The South Florida heat and humidity arrive in late spring and don't let up until October, which means the patio sits empty for a large chunk of the calendar. A patio-to-sunroom conversion changes that completely - the space becomes usable in July just as easily as in January.
If your existing structure is a screen enclosure you want to upgrade, our screen room installation service covers that path as well. For homeowners weighing how to close in an open outdoor area, we also offer enclosed patio rooms as a related option worth reviewing.
If you look out at your patio from May through October and never actually step onto it because of the heat, bugs, or afternoon storms, the space is not working for you. In Greenacres, the outdoor season for an uncovered or screened patio is genuinely short - maybe four to five months out of twelve. A properly cooled sunroom gives those months back.
South Florida's rainy season brings fast, intense storms, and if your patio collects standing water afterward, that is a sign the drainage around your slab needs attention before any conversion begins. A contractor who catches this early can address it as part of the project. Left unaddressed, poor drainage becomes a moisture problem inside your new sunroom.
If your existing patio cover - whether a pergola, aluminum awning, or screen enclosure - is rusting, sagging, or letting in rain, you are already at a natural decision point. Repairing an aging cover often costs nearly as much as replacing it with a proper sunroom structure, and the sunroom gives you a far better return on that investment.
If your home feels tight and you have thought about adding a room but don't want the disruption or cost of a full ground-up addition, your existing patio slab is often the most practical starting point. The footprint is already defined, and most of the construction work happens outside your living area. Many Greenacres homeowners use the converted space as a home office, hobby room, or casual dining area.
Every conversion starts with a site visit to assess your existing slab, measure the space, and discuss how you want to use the finished room. From there we handle the permit application with Palm Beach County, HOA submission if your neighborhood requires it, framing, window installation, roofing, and any electrical work for lighting and outlets. If you want a fully climate-controlled room, we work with you on cooling options - most Greenacres homeowners in this situation choose a dedicated mini-split unit. For homeowners who want to think carefully about how the space will look and feel before committing to construction, our deck-to-sunroom conversion page shows a closely related process worth reviewing, since the design decisions overlap significantly.
We also connect the finished sunroom to your home's existing look and footprint, not just as a bolted-on box. Interior finishing options include flooring, ceiling panels, and trim. If you are interested in enclosing an outdoor area but want something less permanent than a fully walled sunroom, enclosed patio rooms give you a middle-ground option worth comparing before you decide.
Best for homeowners who want a true year-round room with impact glass, a mini-split cooling system, and finished interior walls and flooring.
Suited for homeowners who want weather protection and bug-free outdoor living without the cost of full air conditioning, using screened or single-pane windows.
For patios where the concrete needs evaluation or repair before enclosure work begins - we assess load capacity, drainage, and surface condition as part of the project.
Ideal for homeowners in Palm Beach County HOA communities who want a contractor experienced with the county's plan review and association approval processes.
Greenacres sits in Palm Beach County's high-wind zone, which means any new sunroom must use impact-resistant windows and doors - the kind designed to hold up during a hurricane. This requirement adds to the upfront cost, but impact glass also blocks a significant amount of heat and UV light, which makes the room far more comfortable during South Florida's long summer. Most homes in Greenacres were built between the 1970s and 1990s, and their original patios often weren't designed with a future enclosure in mind. A proper site assessment before construction begins is the step that separates a problem-free project from one that runs into surprises.
We work across the area, including in Lantana and Palm Springs, where the same Palm Beach County permit requirements and HOA landscape apply. The drainage challenges common on Greenacres's flat terrain - and throughout these neighboring communities - are something our crews factor into every slab evaluation from the start. If water management around your patio has been a concern, that conversation belongs in the site visit, not after the framing is up.
We respond within one business day. During that first conversation, we ask about your patio size, whether you have an HOA, and what you want to use the finished room for - so we come to the site visit prepared.
We visit your home to measure the patio, check the slab condition, and assess drainage around the area. A detailed written proposal follows within a few days, covering scope, materials, permit costs, and timeline - no surprises later.
We handle the Palm Beach County permit application and, if your community requires it, prepare the plans for HOA submission. Plan review typically takes two to four weeks. We keep you updated at each step - nothing starts until all approvals are in hand.
Once permits are in hand, framing, windows, and roofing go up - followed by interior finishing and the cooling system. County inspections are coordinated by us at each required stage. The project wraps with a full walkthrough and your copy of the closed permit for your records.
Free on-site estimate. We handle permits, HOA submissions, and Palm Beach County plan review - no paperwork falls on you.
(561) 903-1614We have pulled permits through Palm Beach County's building division for sunroom projects across Greenacres and the surrounding area. That means we know what the plan reviewer looks for, how long each stage takes, and how to avoid the back-and-forth that delays projects for weeks. Local permit experience is not something you can substitute with general contractor credentials.
Every sunroom we build in Greenacres uses windows and doors rated for Palm Beach County's high-wind zone requirements. We specify the right product approvals for this county - not generic impact glass that may not satisfy the local inspector. Getting this right the first time means no failed inspections and no retrofits after the fact.
We assess your existing concrete slab during the site visit, before we give you a price. In South Florida, slabs on flat lots with high water tables sometimes need reinforcement before they can support an enclosed structure. Identifying that early means your written estimate reflects reality - not a number that grows once work begins.
Every project begins with a written proposal that covers the full scope, the timeline, the materials, and what happens if something unexpected comes up. The National Association of the Remodeling Industry recommends written contracts for all remodeling work - we follow that standard on every project, because surprises on your invoice benefit no one.
Each of these proof points connects to the same outcome: a sunroom conversion that passes inspection, holds up in South Florida's climate, and doesn't create problems when you decide to sell. That is what we are building toward on every project in Greenacres.
Starting from an elevated deck instead of a ground-level slab? We handle the structural assessment and enclosure work for deck conversions too.
Learn MoreA lighter-touch alternative to a full sunroom, ideal for homeowners who want weather protection and bug control without a fully climate-controlled addition.
Learn MorePermit slots in Palm Beach County fill up fast - reach out today and we will get your project on the schedule before next summer's heat arrives.