Greenacres Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is the sunroom contractor Lantana homeowners call for patio-to-sunroom conversions, screen rooms, and patio enclosures, serving this area since 2019 with corrosion-resistant materials and full local permit handling for every project.

Lantana homes built in the 1950s through 1980s typically have rear concrete slabs that go unused for most of the day because of heat and rain. A patio-to-sunroom conversion turns that slab into a fully enclosed living space you can actually use - protected from rain, bugs, and the afternoon sun that makes uncovered outdoor areas unbearable.
Lantana sits along the Intracoastal Waterway, and waterfront and canal-side properties get heavy mosquito pressure and afternoon breezes that carry salt mist. A screen room lets you capture those breezes while keeping the bugs out, and we use frames coated for salt-air resistance so they stay rust-free.
Many Lantana homes have covered patios with original aluminum or screen enclosures from the 1970s that are now corroded or damaged. We replace and rebuild those enclosures using current materials and to current Florida Building Code, so you get a structure that will outlast the original by decades.
Lantana lots are modest in size, which means a well-designed sunroom addition has to fit within the existing footprint without crowding the yard or triggering setback issues. We measure and design to your lot before quoting so there are no permit surprises midway through the project.
Lantana gets over 60 inches of rain per year and intense UV exposure year-round. A patio cover gives you a shaded, dry outdoor area even on rainy afternoons, and it reduces heat load on the exterior wall behind it - which matters in a home with older insulation.
For Lantana homeowners who want a low-maintenance enclosure that can handle coastal humidity without peeling or corroding, vinyl sunroom systems are a strong fit. The material does not rust, does not need painting, and holds up well in the wet-dry cycle Lantana sees every year.
Most of Lantana was built between the 1950s and 1980s, which puts the housing stock in an age range where original outdoor enclosures are at or past the end of their useful life. Original aluminum frames from that era corrode faster in Lantana than they would inland because the town sits along the Intracoastal Waterway and canal-adjacent neighborhoods carry salt mist in the air year-round. When screen frames rust through and caulk fails around older glass panels, water gets into the structure and causes damage that spreads fast in this climate. The Town of Lantana requires permits for enclosed structures, and working with a contractor who knows the local inspection process avoids the delays that come with unfamiliar permit offices.
Lantana is also one of the flattest areas in Palm Beach County, which creates drainage problems that matter when you are building an outdoor enclosure. Rain that pooled under an old patio slab for years can leave the concrete cracked or settled in ways that affect how a new enclosure sits. The town is compact - roughly 2.5 square miles - so lots are tight and setback requirements apply closely to most rear-yard projects. A contractor who works in Lantana regularly knows how to build within these constraints without sacrificing usable space.
Our crew works throughout Lantana regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits from the Town of Lantana Building Department for every enclosed addition we build, and we know the inspection schedule the town uses so projects do not sit waiting on hold.
Lantana is a compact town squeezed between Lake Worth Beach to the north and Boynton Beach to the south, with the Intracoastal Waterway defining its eastern edge. Many homeowners live within a short distance of the water - some directly on canals that feed into the Intracoastal. The streets near Lake Worth Road and Hypoluxo Road are where a large share of Lantana's single-family homes sit, and the homes in those neighborhoods are mostly concrete block construction with stucco exteriors and rear slabs that are strong candidates for enclosure work. We encounter waterfront properties near the Old Key Lime House area regularly, where salt-air exposure requires us to specify corrosion-resistant framing and hardware on every job.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Boynton Beach to the south and Lake Worth Beach to the north, so if you have neighbors in either of those communities who need enclosure or sunroom work, we cover those areas as well.
We respond to all Lantana inquiries within one business day. There is no charge for the estimate, and you do not need to be home for the initial call.
We visit your property, check your existing slab and roof line, and walk through the full cost range before any commitment. We flag any slab or drainage issues that need addressing before the enclosure goes in.
We submit the Town of Lantana permit application on your behalf and reach out as soon as it clears. Most projects are scheduled within two weeks of permit approval.
Our crew completes the work on schedule and walks you through the finished space before we leave. We coordinate the final town inspection and give you a copy of all permit documentation for your records.
We serve Lantana homeowners with free, no-pressure estimates. Call or fill out the form and we will get back to you within one business day.
(561) 903-1614Lantana is a small town in Palm Beach County with about 12,000 residents packed into roughly 2.5 square miles. It sits directly on the Intracoastal Waterway, with canals running through several of its residential neighborhoods and a public beach on the Atlantic Ocean. The housing stock is mostly concrete block construction from the postwar era, with single-family homes on small lots and a mix of older condominiums from the 1970s and 1980s. Many residents are long-term homeowners who have lived in the same house for a decade or more and take a careful approach to home improvement. For more background on the community, the Lantana, Florida Wikipedia article provides a solid overview.
The town is bordered by Lake Worth Beach to the north and Boynton Beach to the south, making it easy to reach from either direction. Congress Avenue and Lake Worth Road are the main cross-streets most residents use daily. Waterfront properties near the Intracoastal have direct water access and face the elevated maintenance demands that come with salt air and canal-side humidity. The rental share in Lantana is higher than average for Palm Beach County, but owner-occupied homes make up a solid majority of the residential stock - and those homeowners invest in keeping their properties updated. Our neighbors serving the northern corridor include homeowners in Lake Worth Beach, and we cover that area as well.
Enjoy fresh air without bugs with a professionally installed screen room.
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Learn MoreCall us or fill out the contact form and we will reach out within one business day to schedule your on-site assessment.