Greenacres Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is the sunroom contractor Boynton Beach homeowners call for enclosed patio rooms, screen rooms, and patio enclosures, serving Palm Beach County since 2019 with coastal-rated materials, HOA-compatible designs, and full permit handling on every project.

Boynton Beach homes from the 1960s through the 1980s nearly always have rear concrete slabs that are solid enough for enclosure work but have sat open to the elements for decades. An enclosed patio room turns that underused slab into a weather-protected, insect-free living space you can actually use - without adding square footage that requires a full addition permit.
Boynton Beach sits right on the Atlantic coast, which means mosquito pressure and salt mist are part of daily life for most homeowners. Screen rooms give you a shaded, ventilated outdoor space without bugs, and we use corrosion-resistant framing that holds up in the coastal humidity without rusting or pitting.
Many older Boynton Beach homes have existing aluminum or fiberglass patio enclosures from the 1970s and 1980s that are corroded, sagging, or no longer up to code. We tear out the old structure and build a replacement using current materials and to current Florida Building Code, including wind-load requirements for Palm Beach County.
Boynton Beach gets intense sun from March through October and heavy rain most afternoons in summer. A solid patio cover gives you a usable shaded area in conditions that make uncovered outdoor spaces nearly uninhabitable, and it reduces direct heat gain on the exterior wall behind it.
Boynton Beach lots in established neighborhoods tend to be modestly sized, which makes setback compliance important when adding an enclosed room. We measure your lot and check local setback requirements before quoting, so there are no surprises when we pull the City of Boynton Beach permit.
For Boynton Beach homeowners who want a comfortable outdoor room without the cost of full climate control, a three season sunroom with operable windows provides shade, ventilation, and bug protection at a lower price point than a fully conditioned addition - and it works well for most of the year in this climate.
A large share of Boynton Beach homes were built between 1960 and 1990 on concrete block slab foundations - a construction style common throughout South Florida because it handles hurricane winds better than wood framing. These homes are now 35 to 60 years old, and many of them have rear covered patios or older screen enclosures that have been through decades of heat, salt air, and storm season. Standard aluminum screen frames from the 1970s were not built with coastal exposure in mind, and many have corroded through at the fastener points or bent out of square from hurricane pressure. Getting these replaced or converted to a proper enclosed room requires a contractor who understands how South Florida's climate affects building materials over time - not someone who will install the same components that failed on the original.
Boynton Beach also has an unusually high concentration of HOA-governed communities. Many of the 55-plus communities, newer subdivisions, and waterfront neighborhoods require exterior modification approval before a permit can even be submitted. The City of Boynton Beach Community Standards also enforces maintenance requirements on a regular basis, which means a patio enclosure that falls apart or shows visible rust can generate a code compliance notice. Building it right the first time - with correct materials and proper permits - protects you from both angles.
Our crew works throughout Boynton Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits from the City of Boynton Beach Building Division for every project, and we know the HOA approval process well enough to help homeowners understand what documentation they need before the city permit can move forward.
Boynton Beach runs from the Atlantic coast inland to the western communities off Boynton Beach Boulevard and beyond. The neighborhoods east of Congress Avenue tend to be older and include a mix of single-family ranch homes and condo complexes, many built in the 1970s and early 1980s. Properties in those eastern neighborhoods are often a short distance from the Boynton Beach Inlet and the Intracoastal Waterway, which means salt-air exposure is real and material selection matters. Neighborhoods further west - off Lawrence Road and Congress Avenue toward the Turnpike - are generally newer, with larger lots and more room for rear-yard enclosure projects without setback issues. We work across all of these areas and know what to expect from each.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Delray Beach to the south and Lantana to the north, so if your neighbors in those communities need sunroom or enclosure work, we cover both areas.
We respond to all Boynton Beach inquiries within one business day. There is no charge for the estimate, and you do not need to be home for the initial consultation call.
We visit your property and inspect your slab, existing structure, and site conditions. We walk you through the full cost range before you commit and flag any HOA approval steps or drainage issues that need to be handled before work starts.
We submit the City of Boynton Beach permit application on your behalf and schedule construction as soon as approval clears. Most projects are on the build calendar within two weeks of permit issuance.
Our crew finishes the work on schedule and walks you through the completed space before leaving the site. We coordinate the final city inspection and give you copies of all permit documentation for your records.
We serve all of Boynton Beach including HOA communities and waterfront properties. Free estimates, permits handled, and we know the local approval process.
(561) 903-1614Boynton Beach is a city of roughly 80,000 people on the Atlantic coast of Palm Beach County, positioned between Delray Beach to the south and Lantana to the north. The city has its own Atlantic beachfront at Oceanfront Park and connects to the Intracoastal Waterway through the Boynton Beach Inlet - a waterway that fishermen, boaters, and kayakers use constantly and that locals pass on their way to and from the beach. Boynton Beach has a notably large population of long-term residents and retirees, many of whom have lived in the same concrete block ranch homes for 20 or 30 years and are now looking to update rather than move. The neighborhoods east of Federal Highway and Congress Avenue contain most of the older single-family housing stock, while the western communities tend to be newer and governed by HOAs with specific exterior standards.
The city has also grown significantly over the past two decades, with new townhome communities and mixed-use development along Federal Highway and in the downtown area near City Hall. Homeowners across all of these neighborhoods face the same core challenge: the heat, humidity, and coastal exposure that come with living in South Florida mean outdoor structures degrade faster here than almost anywhere in the country. Neighboring Delray Beach to the south shares many of the same building stock characteristics, and we serve that community as well. If your goal is to get more use out of your outdoor space without constant maintenance, an enclosed patio room or screen room built to Boynton Beach conditions is the right investment.
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Learn MoreFrom HOA communities to older coastal neighborhoods, we build enclosures and sunrooms that hold up in Boynton Beach conditions - contact us today for a free estimate.