Greenacres Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is the sunroom contractor West Palm Beach homeowners call for sunroom remodeling, patio enclosures, and screen rooms, serving Palm Beach County since 2019 with full local permit handling and materials rated for coastal salt-air exposure.

West Palm Beach has a large number of older enclosed patios and screen rooms - some dating back to the 1970s - that are overdue for a full renovation. Our sunroom remodeling service upgrades aging frames, replaces failing glazing, and brings existing structures up to current Florida Building Code so your space is comfortable and storm-ready.
Many West Palm Beach homes in neighborhoods like Flamingo Park and El Cid have rear covered patios that go unused most of the year because of heat and insects. A fully enclosed patio with screen or glass panels gives you a usable outdoor room that stays comfortable even during summer afternoons.
West Palm Beach sits along the Intracoastal Waterway, and properties near the water deal with mosquito pressure and salt mist year-round. We install screen rooms using aluminum framing with corrosion-resistant powder coating so the structure holds up in the coastal air without rusting out.
West Palm Beach homes range from small bungalows to larger properties with room for meaningful additions. Whether you want a conditioned four-season room or a simple screened addition, we design to your lot constraints and pull all required city permits before the first nail goes in.
West Palm Beach sees intense UV radiation and summer heat that makes unconditioned outdoor spaces uncomfortable for much of the year. A fully insulated four season room with proper glazing and HVAC integration lets you use the space year-round without running up energy costs inside your main home.
For West Palm Beach homeowners who want low-maintenance enclosures that resist the humidity, salt air, and UV exposure this area delivers year-round, vinyl sunroom systems are an excellent choice. They do not rust, do not peel, and hold their appearance without repainting.
West Palm Beach has one of the most varied housing stocks in Palm Beach County - Mediterranean Revival homes from the 1920s and 1930s in Flamingo Park and El Cid sit a few miles from concrete block ranch houses built in the 1960s, and newer townhomes downtown. Each building era brings different materials and structural expectations. Homes in the historic neighborhoods often have original stucco exteriors, clay tile roofs, and older window systems that require specific techniques when adding an enclosed room. A contractor unfamiliar with these materials can cause damage to surfaces that are expensive to restore. The City of West Palm Beach historic preservation guidelines add another layer of review for properties in designated historic districts, which affects what materials can be used and what approvals are required.
The city also faces real coastal exposure. West Palm Beach sits directly on the Intracoastal Waterway, with the Atlantic Ocean a short distance east across Palm Beach Island. Salt air works on metal fasteners, screen frames, and exterior caulking every single day - especially within a mile or two of the water. Homes also face West Palm Beach's full share of hurricane season risk, with storm activity from June through November every year. Every enclosure and sunroom addition we build here meets Palm Beach County wind-load requirements under the Florida Building Code, using impact-rated materials that are appropriate for the coastal exposure this city sees.
Our crew works throughout West Palm Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits from the City of West Palm Beach Building Division for every enclosed addition and remodel we build, and we are familiar with the inspection timeline and review process the city uses for residential construction.
West Palm Beach is the largest city in Palm Beach County, stretching from the Intracoastal west through older residential neighborhoods and into growing areas near the SoSo district south of Southern Boulevard. Homeowners near Rosemary Square and along Clematis Street are often in condos or townhomes with shared-wall construction that changes how an enclosure is permitted and built. Further west, the older concrete block ranch homes built in the 1950s through 1970s are strong candidates for rear-patio enclosures - the slabs on those homes are durable, and the neighborhood setbacks are generous enough for a proper addition. We also work regularly on waterfront properties near the Intracoastal, where we specify corrosion-resistant hardware and coatings on every project.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Riviera Beach to the north and Palm Springs to the south, so if your neighbors in those communities are looking for sunroom or enclosure work, we cover the whole area.
We respond to all West Palm Beach inquiries within one business day. There is no charge for the initial consultation, and you do not need to be home for the first call.
We visit your property, inspect your slab, roof line, and any existing structure, then walk you through a full cost range before you commit. We flag historic district requirements, HOA approvals, or slab conditions that need addressing upfront.
We handle the City of West Palm Beach permit application on your behalf and notify you as soon as it clears. Most projects are scheduled for construction within two weeks of permit approval.
Our crew finishes the work on schedule and walks you through the completed space before leaving. We coordinate the city inspection and give you copies of all permit documentation for your records.
We serve West Palm Beach and all of Palm Beach County. Free estimates, no pressure, and we handle every permit from start to final inspection.
(561) 903-1614West Palm Beach is the largest city in Palm Beach County and one of the main urban centers of South Florida, with roughly 117,000 residents spread across a wide range of neighborhoods. The city has some of the oldest residential streets in the region - Flamingo Park and El Cid are listed on the National Register of Historic Places and contain homes built in the Mediterranean Revival and Mission styles of the 1920s through 1940s. These blocks are among the most architecturally distinct in the county and are home to residents who care deeply about how any addition or improvement fits with the existing character of their property. Further west, the city transitions to larger-lot suburban neighborhoods with postwar concrete block construction and more room for rear-yard enclosure projects.
Downtown West Palm Beach has undergone significant investment over the past two decades, with Rosemary Square and the Clematis Street corridor drawing residents to newer condos and restored older buildings. The city sits directly on the Intracoastal Waterway with Palm Beach Island just across the water, which means coastal exposure affects nearly every part of the city to some degree. Homeowners in nearby Riviera Beach to the north face similar waterfront conditions, and we work throughout that community as well. Whether your home is in a historic bungalow neighborhood or a newer development, West Palm Beach is a city where outdoor living space is genuinely valuable - and where a properly built sunroom or enclosure adds real function to a property you are likely invested in for the long term.
Enjoy fresh air without bugs with a professionally installed screen room.
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Learn MoreFrom older historic homes to newer waterfront properties, we build enclosures and sunrooms that fit West Palm Beach homes - contact us today for a free estimate.