Greenacres Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is the sunroom contractor Palm Springs homeowners call for patio enclosures, screen rooms, and sunroom additions, working in this village since 2019 with a crew that knows the CBS construction and low-pitch rooflines common here.

Palm Springs homes from the 1950s through 1970s typically have rear concrete slabs with original aluminum enclosures that are now cracked, corroded, or simply worn out. A replacement patio enclosure gives you a solid, updated structure built to current Florida Building Code, turning that slab back into a comfortable outdoor room you can use all year.
Palm Springs is an almost entirely residential village, and backyard screen rooms are a practical upgrade for homeowners who want to use their outdoor space in the evening without dealing with mosquitoes or the daily afternoon rain. Screen rooms work especially well on the small to mid-size lots common throughout the village.
Because Palm Springs is almost entirely built out with no room for new construction, adding a sunroom to an existing home is one of the few ways to gain real living space in this village. We design additions to work within Palm Springs setback requirements, keeping the project within what your lot can support.
Many Palm Springs homeowners have a covered patio that sits empty most of the day because of heat and rain. Converting that existing covered area into a fully enclosed room costs less than a new addition and makes use of a structure and slab already in place, which also simplifies the permit process.
Palm Springs gets over 230 sunny days a year, and an uncovered rear patio becomes unusable by mid-morning from May through October. A patio cover solves that immediately - giving you a shaded outdoor area and reducing the heat that radiates through the wall behind it into your home.
For Palm Springs homeowners who want a durable, low-maintenance option that handles the village's humidity and year-round heat without peeling or rusting, vinyl sunroom systems are a solid choice. They require almost no upkeep after installation and hold their finish well in South Florida conditions.
Palm Springs is a fully built-out village where most of the housing stock dates from the 1950s through the 1980s. That means homeowners are working with older slabs, aging aluminum enclosures, and concrete block walls that have been through decades of South Florida heat, humidity, and hurricane seasons. UV exposure in Palm Springs is intense - the village sees over 230 sunny days per year, which breaks down caulking, fades screening, and degrades older framing materials faster than homeowners expect. The flat terrain throughout the village also means drainage around patios and rear slabs is a real issue: standing water after summer storms pushes against enclosure footings and works into cracks in older concrete. The Village of Palm Springs has its own permitting office, and contractors who do not work in this municipality regularly can run into delays that add weeks to a project.
The dominant building type - single-story concrete block ranch homes with low-pitch rooflines and small rear yards - shapes what enclosure work looks like here. These homes are well-suited for screen rooms and patio enclosures, but the low-pitch roof ties require careful flashing to prevent water intrusion at the connection point. About half of Palm Springs housing units are rentals, so the owner-occupied half of the market tends to be homeowners who are serious about maintaining and improving their properties rather than just patching problems. Those homeowners benefit most from working with a contractor who knows what materials and details actually hold up in this specific climate.
Our crew works throughout Palm Springs regularly, and we pull permits from the Village of Palm Springs Building Department for every enclosed structure we build here. We know the local inspection process and schedule our builds around the permit timeline so your project does not stall waiting on paperwork.
Palm Springs is a small, landlocked village bordered by West Palm Beach to the north and Lake Worth Beach to the south. South Military Trail runs through the middle of the village and is the commercial corridor most residents use daily. The residential streets branching off Military Trail are quiet, established blocks of single-story concrete block homes with compact rear yards - the kind of property where a well-built screen room or patio enclosure adds real day-to-day value. Palm Springs sits about 5 to 6 miles from the Atlantic coast, close enough that coastal humidity and salt air affect exterior materials, but far enough that homes avoid the direct storm surge risk of oceanfront properties. We keep that in mind when specifying framing and hardware - using materials appropriate for the coastal climate zone Palm Springs falls within.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Lake Worth and Greenacres, so if you know someone in one of those communities who is looking for sunroom or enclosure work, we cover the whole area.
We respond to all Palm Springs inquiries within one business day. There is no charge to get an estimate, and you do not need to be home for the initial conversation.
We come to your property, measure your slab, check your roof tie-in point, and walk through the full cost range with you. We also flag any drainage or slab prep that needs to happen before the enclosure goes in.
We submit the Village of Palm Springs permit application and schedule your build as soon as it is approved. Most projects are on the calendar within two weeks of permit clearance.
Our crew completes the work on the agreed timeline and walks you through the finished enclosure before leaving. We handle the village final inspection and provide permit documentation for your records.
We serve Palm Springs homeowners with free, no-pressure estimates. Call or fill out the form and we will respond within one business day.
(561) 903-1614Palm Springs is a small village in Palm Beach County with a population of around 24,000. It is a landlocked community - surrounded on all sides by West Palm Beach, Lake Worth Beach, and Greenacres - with no room left for new development. The village is almost entirely residential, with a commercial strip along South Military Trail and quiet neighborhood streets filling everything else. The housing stock is predominantly concrete block ranch homes built between the 1950s and 1980s, sitting on modest lots with flat yards. For a broader look at the village and its history, the Village of Palm Springs official site has current information on local government and services.
The community has a notably diverse population, with a large share of long-term residents who own their homes and maintain them carefully. About half of housing units are owner-occupied, and those homeowners tend to be invested in improvements that add real value to their properties rather than short-term fixes. The village sits about 5 to 6 miles from the Atlantic coast - far enough to avoid direct beachfront exposure, but close enough that the coastal climate affects exterior materials and how quickly things deteriorate outdoors. Homeowners in Palm Springs work alongside neighbors in Lake Worth to the south and Greenacres to the west, both of which we serve as well.
Enjoy fresh air without bugs with a professionally installed screen room.
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Learn MoreCall us or submit the contact form and we will reach out within one business day to schedule your on-site assessment.