Greenacres Lanai Sunrooms & Patios brings screen room installation, patio enclosures, and custom sunroom additions to Lake Worth Beach homeowners, with salt-air-rated materials and local permit handling built into every project - serving this coastal community since 2019.

Lake Worth Beach homeowners live a few minutes from the Atlantic, and outdoor living is part of daily life here. A professionally installed screen room lets you stay outside in the evening breeze without the mosquitoes, and when we specify marine-grade aluminum frames, the structure holds up to the coastal salt air without rusting through in a few seasons.
Many homes in Lake Worth Beach were built in the 1950s and 1960s with rear slabs that have never been enclosed. A patio enclosure modernizes that space, adds protection from afternoon storm rain, and increases the livable area of smaller homes in this city without a major structural addition.
For homeowners near downtown Lake Worth Beach who own older bungalows or cottages, a sunroom addition is one of the most effective ways to add square footage to a small home without the complexity of a full structural addition. We design additions that complement the older architectural character of these neighborhoods.
Lake Worth Beach has a mild climate even by South Florida standards, and a three-season sunroom gives you a weatherproofed outdoor room that is comfortable from October through May without the cost of full HVAC conditioning. It is the right fit for homeowners who want more than a screen room but do not need climate control year-round.
Vinyl framing systems are a practical choice for Lake Worth Beach because they do not corrode in the salt air the way standard aluminum can over time. Vinyl sunrooms hold their color, require almost no maintenance, and perform well in the humid coastal environment that accelerates wear on other frame materials.
Older homes in Lake Worth Beach sometimes have existing enclosed porches or screen rooms that were built decades ago with materials that are now failing. We remodel these spaces with updated framing, new screen or glass panels, and corrected flashing to stop leaks and extend the useful life of the structure.
Lake Worth Beach sits directly on the Atlantic coast, and that proximity changes how every outdoor structure performs over time. Salt air carried off the ocean accelerates corrosion on aluminum components, window hardware, and fasteners far faster than in inland cities like Greenacres or Boynton Beach. A screen room or sunroom built with standard residential-grade materials may look fine for a year or two, then begin showing rust stains, failing hinges, and corroded tracks well before its expected lifespan. Contractors who work regularly in coastal Palm Beach County know which materials hold up here and which ones do not, and that knowledge directly affects how long your investment lasts. The City of Lake Worth Beach has its own permitting requirements separate from Palm Beach County, so contractors need to work with the right building authority for your project.
The housing stock in Lake Worth Beach adds another layer of complexity. A large share of homes in the city were built before 1980, and many of the oldest neighborhoods near downtown contain wood-frame bungalows alongside the more common concrete block homes. These two building types require different tie-in methods for new enclosed structures, and a contractor who does not account for that difference creates leak and structural problems down the road. Small lots and tight street grids throughout the city also mean that staging, access, and material handling have to be thought through before the first truck pulls up.
Our crew works throughout Lake Worth Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits from the City of Lake Worth Beach Building Division and are familiar with the inspection requirements the city uses for enclosed additions and screen structures, which differ from the process in neighboring municipalities.
Lake Worth Beach is a compact city with a lot of character packed into a small area. The neighborhoods just off Lake Avenue and Lucerne Avenue near downtown contain some of the oldest homes in the area, and we have worked on bungalows and cottages in that part of the city that require careful planning around existing roof lines and original wood framing. Further inland, the homes shift to the concrete block construction more typical of mid-century South Florida, and those properties present their own set of considerations for slab tie-ins and flashing details. The Lake Worth Beach Pier and the Intracoastal Waterway are familiar reference points for most residents, and homes on both the ocean and the lagoon sides of the city feel the effects of coastal humidity year-round.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Lantana, which borders Lake Worth Beach to the south, and in the Greenacres area to the west. If you have a neighbor in one of those communities looking for the same work, we cover the whole corridor.
We return all Lake Worth Beach inquiries within one business day. No cost, no obligation, and you do not need to have all the details figured out before you call.
We visit your property, inspect your slab and existing structure, discuss your goals, and give you a full cost breakdown. We flag any site issues - like old or undersized slabs - before they become surprises during construction.
We submit the permit application to the City of Lake Worth Beach Building Division and manage the approval process. Most permits clear within one to two weeks, and we contact you as soon as the project can be scheduled.
Our crew builds the structure on the agreed timeline and schedules the final city inspection. We walk you through the finished space before we leave and provide copies of all permit and inspection documentation.
We serve Lake Worth Beach homeowners with honest quotes and no-pressure consultations. Fill out the form or call us and we will respond within one business day.
(561) 903-1614Lake Worth Beach is a small, dense city of about 40,000 people packed into roughly eight square miles on the Atlantic coast of Palm Beach County. The city sits on a barrier island between the Atlantic Ocean and the Intracoastal Waterway, giving it a distinct coastal character that sets it apart from inland communities like Greenacres or Palm Springs. The downtown corridor along Lake Avenue and Lucerne Avenue is well known to long-time South Florida residents for its local restaurants, art galleries, and the historic Lake Worth Playhouse. The neighborhoods closest to downtown contain some of the oldest housing in the area, with bungalows and cottages dating to the 1920s and 1930s sitting alongside concrete block homes from the postwar decades.
The residential mix in Lake Worth Beach ranges from these older single-family homes near the waterfront to duplexes, small apartment buildings, and newer construction further inland. The city has a notably diverse population and a high proportion of renters, but there is also a committed base of long-term homeowners who take pride in maintaining their properties. The Lake Worth Beach Pier and the public beach are the most recognized landmarks, and the Intracoastal running along the western edge of the city gives many neighborhoods a waterfront character. To the south, the city borders Lantana, another coastal community where we work regularly on similar older housing stock.
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Learn MoreCall us today or send a message. We respond within one business day and estimates are always free for Lake Worth Beach homeowners.