
You want a room that actually works in South Florida - comfortable in July, solid in a storm, and permitted from the first nail to the final inspection. We build sunrooms in Lake Clarke Shores the right way, every time.

Sunroom construction in Lake Clarke Shores covers the full process of building a new enclosed addition - foundation, framing, glazing, roof, and optional HVAC connection - with a Palm Beach County permit and inspections at every required stage, and most active construction runs one to three weeks once permits are in hand.
In this part of South Florida, construction planning is shaped by the wet season, hurricane requirements, and the sandy, high-water-table soils that run through the Lake Clarke Shores area. Getting the drainage design right and anchoring the addition properly are not optional extras - they are what make the difference between a room that holds up for decades and one that starts leaking by the second rainy season. Homeowners who want to think through the design in detail first may want to start with a sunroom additions consultation before committing to a full build scope.
We handle the permit process with Palm Beach County from application through final inspection, coordinate with your HOA if needed, and keep you updated on where things stand at every stage - no chasing paperwork or waiting for callbacks.
If your patio goes unused because the sun is too intense or the bugs too persistent, a sunroom solves both problems at once. In Lake Clarke Shores, where the sun is strong and mosquitoes are active from spring through fall, an enclosed sunroom turns a space you avoid into one you actually use.
A sunroom is a practical middle path - it adds a real, usable room at lower cost and with less disruption than expanding your home's main footprint. Whether you need a home office, a dining space, or a casual gathering room, sunroom construction delivers that without tearing into your interior.
Many homeowners in this area want the bright, airy feeling of being outdoors without the punishing afternoon heat. A properly designed sunroom with the right glass and cooling connection gives you that feeling while keeping the temperature comfortable even in July and August.
Buyers in Palm Beach County respond well to homes that make the most of outdoor living. A well-built, permitted sunroom signals that the home has been thoughtfully improved and gives buyers an extra room they can picture using from day one.
We build sunrooms from the ground up and handle every stage of the project. For homeowners who already have a clear vision, we move directly into construction planning. For homeowners who want help refining the scope before signing a contract, we start with a design conversation. Either way, we manage permitting, coordinate inspections, and handle the full build.
After construction is complete, we also offer sunroom remodeling for homeowners whose existing addition needs updating - new glass, new roof panels, better insulation, or a full interior refresh. If you have an existing screened room or older Florida room, that is often a faster and less expensive path than starting from scratch.
Suits homeowners starting from a bare yard or concrete pad who want a complete new enclosed addition built from the foundation up.
Suits homeowners with an existing covered patio slab who want to enclose the space with glass walls and a proper roof system.
Suits homeowners who want a fully insulated, climate-controlled room tied into their home's HVAC - the most usable option for South Florida's long summers.
Suits homeowners who want a lighter, lower-cost enclosure primarily for the cooler months, with screened or minimal-glazing walls.
Building in Lake Clarke Shores means working in a small, established town where lot setbacks are tight, the soil is sandy with a high water table, and many properties sit near the lake or the town's canal system. Those details shape everything from the foundation design to how we slope the roof for drainage. The rainy season from June through September brings heavy daily rain, and a sunroom with poor drainage will leak or pool water near your foundation within the first year. Getting that right from the start is not complicated, but it requires a contractor who has actually worked in this area.
We also build in Greenacres and Royal Palm Beach, where the building code requirements and HOA landscapes differ from Lake Clarke Shores. In every community, we pull the permit, schedule the inspections, and do not start framing until the county has approved the plans - because that is the only way to build something that passes and lasts.
Contact us by phone or through the estimate form. We reply within one business day and can usually schedule a site visit within the week - no waiting weeks to hear back.
We visit your home, review the space, and talk through how you plan to use the room. You receive a detailed written estimate covering scope, materials, and a realistic timeline including permit review.
We submit the Palm Beach County permit application and handle HOA coordination if needed. Once permits are approved, foundation work begins - this is often the most disruptive day or two of the project.
Framing, glazing, roof installation, and electrical run in sequence over one to three weeks. We schedule all required county inspections and do a final walkthrough with you before calling the project complete.
We visit your home, review the space, and give you a written estimate with a realistic timeline - no obligation.
(561) 954-0058We file with Palm Beach County, track the review timeline, and schedule inspections at every required stage. You never have to call the permit office or wonder if the work is legal - we manage that entire process.
From June through September, Lake Clarke Shores gets heavy afternoon rain. We design every sunroom roof with proper slope and drainage to move water away from your home's foundation - preventing the leaks and pooling that plague poorly designed additions.
Palm Beach County requires wind-rated construction for any enclosed addition. We specify glass and anchoring systems that meet those standards, so your sunroom is built to hold up when a storm rolls through - not just when the sun is shining.
Lake Clarke Shores is a small, established town where lot setbacks and HOA requirements can limit where and how large a sunroom can be. We confirm what your property allows before designing anything, saving you from plans that cannot be built.
The Florida Building Code sets the standards for wind resistance, energy efficiency, and structural performance that apply to every enclosed addition in this state - and Palm Beach County enforces those standards through its permit and inspection process. Every project we complete passes those inspections, which means your finished room is not just attractive, it is legally documented and built to last.
Update an existing sunroom with new glass, better insulation, or a full interior refresh.
Learn MoreExplore the full range of sunroom addition types before choosing the right construction approach for your home.
Learn MorePermit timelines add weeks to every project - the sooner you reach out, the sooner you can be sitting in your new room.