Greenacres Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is the sunroom contractor Royal Palm Beach homeowners call for custom sunroom design, patio enclosures, and screen rooms, serving Palm Beach County since 2019 with HOA-compatible designs, wind-rated materials, and permits handled on every job. We respond within one business day.

Royal Palm Beach is a planned community with HOA-governed subdivisions where the exterior appearance of any addition matters as much as its function. Our sunroom design process starts with your home's existing roofline, stucco finish, and lot orientation so the finished room looks like it was always there - not bolted on afterward.
Most Royal Palm Beach homes built in the 1980s and 1990s came with concrete slab patios that are perfectly sized for enclosure. We work with the existing slab wherever the concrete is in good condition, which keeps material costs down and shortens the build timeline significantly compared to starting from scratch.
Royal Palm Beach's long rainy season and humid evenings make mosquito control a real concern for any outdoor living space. A properly framed screen room with tight-mesh aluminum screening lets you use the rear yard from October through May without the insects - and without the cost of a fully enclosed room.
Royal Palm Beach summers reach the low 90s with daily afternoon storms from May through September - conditions that make an uncovered or screened-only patio unusable for months. An all season room with insulated glazing and a mini-split AC system gives you a comfortable, weatherproof living space that works every week of the year.
Royal Palm Beach's high owner-occupancy rate and strong home values make a sunroom addition one of the more practical investments a homeowner can make here - it adds usable square footage and improves how the rear of the home looks and feels without a full room addition at full construction cost.
South Florida's intense year-round UV exposure and high humidity are hard on aluminum framing over time, making vinyl frame systems an increasingly popular choice in Royal Palm Beach. Vinyl does not corrode, holds its color without repainting, and insulates better than bare aluminum - a practical fit for homes that will sit in direct sun for decades.
Royal Palm Beach grew quickly between the 1980s and early 2000s, which means a large share of its housing stock is now 25 to 45 years old. Homes from that era were built with concrete block and stucco - solid South Florida construction, but the screen enclosures and covered patios that were added during those decades used materials and wind ratings that fall short of today's Florida Building Code. Older aluminum frames corrode at the fastener points, sealants crack from UV exposure, and screen panels tear from storm pressure. By the time the damage is visible, water has often already worked its way into the surrounding structure. Bringing an older enclosure up to current code - or replacing it with a properly designed room - protects the rest of the home.
Royal Palm Beach is also a heavily HOA-governed community. The village was planned from the start with organized subdivisions and clear neighborhood boundaries, and many of those subdivisions have active architectural review boards that must approve exterior modifications before any permit is submitted. Materials that look similar can have very different approval rates depending on the specific HOA. Working with a contractor who designs with HOA review in mind from the first sketch - rather than discovering restrictions at the permit stage - saves weeks and avoids the cost of redesigning work that is already drawn up.
Our crew works throughout Royal Palm Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The housing stock is almost entirely concrete block construction - CBS homes are what we work on every week, and we know how to anchor into block walls properly without guesswork about what is behind the stucco.
Royal Palm Beach sits in the western communities of Palm Beach County, bordered by Wellington to the south and the Acreage to the west. Okeechobee Boulevard and Southern Boulevard are the main arteries connecting the village to the rest of the county. Most of the neighborhoods are organized subdivisions with identifiable street grids and rear-yard access from alley easements or side gates - layouts our crew navigates regularly. Royal Palm Beach Commons Park sits near the center of the village and is a useful reference point when homeowners describe where they are located. The flat terrain means good drainage planning matters on every rear-yard project, since standing water after summer storms is a real issue on low-lying lots.
We serve neighboring Wellington to the south and West Palm Beach to the east, so if you have neighbors in those communities who need sunroom or enclosure work, we cover those areas regularly as well.
We respond to all Royal Palm Beach inquiries within one business day. There is no obligation, and you do not need to have a specific plan in mind before you call - we help you figure out what makes sense for your home and your budget.
We come to your property, inspect the existing slab or structure, check rear-yard setbacks, and walk through the full cost range before you commit. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we identify the approval steps and likely material requirements at this stage.
We submit the permit application and coordinate with Palm Beach County Building Division on your behalf. Once permit approval clears, we schedule your build - most Royal Palm Beach projects are on the calendar within two to three weeks of approval.
Our crew handles the full build from framing through finishing, schedules and passes all required inspections, and walks you through the completed room before we close out. We do not leave until you are satisfied with the result.
We serve homeowners throughout Royal Palm Beach with free on-site estimates and no-pressure quotes. Call or fill out the form and we will respond within one business day.
(561) 903-1614Royal Palm Beach is an incorporated village in western Palm Beach County with roughly 40,000 residents and a housing stock that reflects its rapid growth from the 1960s through the early 2000s. The village was developed as a planned community, and most of its residential neighborhoods are organized subdivisions of single-family CBS homes on flat, slab-foundation lots. Owner-occupancy is high, and many residents have lived in the same home for 10 to 20 years - which means homes are well cared for, but many are also at the age where major exterior systems like screen enclosures, roofs, and HVAC equipment are due for replacement or upgrade.
Royal Palm Beach Commons Park anchors the center of the village with sports fields, a splash pad, and walking paths that draw families from across the community. To the south, Wellington - known for its international equestrian events at the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center - is the closest major neighbor. To the west, the Acreage and Loxahatchee give way to larger rural lots. Homeowners in both Royal Palm Beach and neighboring Boynton Beach to the southeast tend to have similar housing profiles - owner-occupied CBS homes with rear-yard slabs that are good candidates for enclosure work. We serve both communities regularly.
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Learn MoreCall us now or request a free estimate online - we serve all of Royal Palm Beach and respond within one business day.