Greenacres Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is the sunroom contractor Wellington homeowners call for all season rooms, enclosed patios, 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.

Wellington homes built in the 1980s and 1990s often have covered lanais or screen cages that were fine for a different era but do not hold up to today's summer storm seasons. An all season room replaces or upgrades that older structure with a fully enclosed, climate-controlled space you can use every month of the year - not just when the weather cooperates.
Wellington's planned subdivisions were built on large lots that often include generous rear patio slabs - exactly the kind of footprint that converts well into a proper enclosure. We work with existing concrete wherever the slab is in good condition, which keeps the cost down and the construction timeline short.
Wellington's afternoon thunderstorm season runs from June through September, bringing heavy rain and the mosquito pressure that follows. A screen room with a solid aluminum frame and tight-mesh screening gives you a protected outdoor space without sealing off airflow - ideal for Wellington's cooler winter and spring months when you want to be outside without the insects.
Wellington homeowners in HOA communities often want a sunroom addition that fits the neighborhood aesthetic - matching roof pitch, stucco finish, or tile-roof trim. We design enclosures that work with the existing exterior so they pass HOA architectural review without multiple rounds of revisions.
Equestrian properties and estate-sized lots in western Wellington often have large covered outdoor areas that go largely unused because there is no weather or insect protection. Enclosing those spaces with solid panels and operable windows turns a seasonal area into a functional room - useful for storage, entertaining, or a second living space.
Wellington's low-to-mid 90s summer heat makes uncovered rear patios essentially unusable from May through October. A solid patio cover with proper overhang shades the outdoor area and reduces heat gain on the exterior wall behind it - lowering the load on the AC system serving the adjacent interior rooms.
Wellington was built out mostly between the late 1970s and early 2000s, and the bulk of its housing stock is now 25 to 45 years old. Homes from that era were built with concrete block and stucco - durable construction for South Florida, but in this heat and humidity, stucco cracks over time and lets moisture into the block behind it. More importantly, the screen enclosures and covered patios that came with those homes were not built with the material quality or wind ratings that current Florida Building Code requires. Older aluminum screen frames corrode at the fastener points and lose structural integrity long before they look obviously broken. By the time a homeowner notices the problem, water damage to the surrounding structure has already started.
Wellington is also one of the largest villages in Florida by area, which means conditions vary significantly from one neighborhood to the next. Properties near the show grounds off South Shore Boulevard and in the equestrian communities to the west sit on large lots where an outbuilding or covered arena structure may be close to the rear work zone - a detail that affects staging and access during construction. HOA-governed neighborhoods like Versailles and Olympia have strict rules about exterior modifications, including enclosure materials, paint colors, and roof type. Working with a contractor who knows the Village of Wellington permit process and is familiar with local HOA approval requirements saves weeks of back-and-forth.
Our crew works throughout Wellington regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits from the Village of Wellington Building Division for every project, and our team is familiar with the HOA architectural review process that most planned community homeowners in Wellington must navigate before a permit can move forward.
Wellington spans nearly 47 square miles of western Palm Beach County. Forest Hill Boulevard and South Shore Boulevard are the main east-west routes, and Southern Boulevard connects the village to the broader Palm Beach County road network. Neighborhoods on the eastern side of the village tend to be denser and have smaller rear yards, while communities further west - including those near the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center - sit on larger parcels where access is straightforward and rear-yard projects have more room to work. We have done jobs across all of these areas and know what to expect in each.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Royal Palm Beach to the north and West Palm Beach to the northeast, so if your neighbors in those communities have sunroom or enclosure needs, we cover both areas.
We respond to all Wellington inquiries within one business day. The estimate is free and there is no obligation - you do not need to be home for the initial phone consultation.
We come to your property, inspect the existing slab or structure, check lot setbacks, and walk through the full cost range before you commit. We flag any HOA steps and drainage considerations that could affect your timeline.
We submit the Village of Wellington permit application and schedule your project for construction once approval clears. Most Wellington projects are on the calendar within two to three weeks of permit approval.
Our crew handles construction from framing through finishing. We schedule and pass all required inspections, then walk you through the completed project before we close out.
We serve Wellington and all of Palm Beach County. Free estimate, no pressure, reply within one business day.
(561) 903-1614Wellington is one of the largest incorporated villages in the United States, covering roughly 47 square miles in western Palm Beach County with a population of around 65,000 residents. The village was developed as a planned community starting in the late 1970s and was incorporated in 1996. Its housing stock runs from standard suburban ranch homes and two-story houses in subdivisions like Versailles and Olympia to large estate properties and equestrian facilities in the communities surrounding the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center, which makes Wellington internationally known as an equestrian destination every winter. Homeownership rates are high, household incomes are above the county average, and residents tend to invest in their properties.
The village has a strong community identity centered on its parks, its equestrian culture, and its walkable amenities around Wellington Green Mall on Forest Hill Boulevard. Most of the residential neighborhoods are governed by homeowners associations with specific rules about exterior finishes and modifications. Residents in neighboring Royal Palm Beach share similar building stock and HOA conditions, and many homeowners in both communities have the same questions about sunroom permitting and HOA approval. The combination of large lots, stable homeownership, and an aging housing inventory makes Wellington one of the most active markets for patio enclosure and sunroom additions in Palm Beach County.
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Learn MoreWellington homeowners book fast during season. Contact us now and we will have your project assessed and scheduled before the summer storm season arrives.