
Lake Clarke Shores Lanai Sunrooms & Patios converts patios into sunrooms, installs screen rooms, and builds patio enclosures for homeowners throughout Boynton Beach, FL. We pull permits through the City of Boynton Beach, understand the CBS construction common throughout the city's older neighborhoods, and know what coastal salt air and South Florida storms demand from outdoor structures - serving Palm Beach County since 2020.

Boynton Beach has a large share of homes from the 1950s through 1980s, many of which have original concrete slab patios that are structurally sound after decades of South Florida use. Where that slab is in good condition, our patio-to-sunroom conversion service builds the enclosure on top of the existing pour - eliminating demolition costs and shortening the permit timeline compared to a full new addition.
Boynton Beach sits on the Atlantic coast, and the combination of coastal humidity, summer mosquito pressure, and afternoon thunderstorms from June through September makes an unprotected patio difficult to use for months at a time. A screen room with corrosion-resistant framing and fiberglass mesh handles the salt air, keeps the bugs out, and is engineered to meet Florida Building Code wind-load requirements for coastal Palm Beach County.
West of I-95, newer Boynton Beach communities built in the 1990s and 2000s often have covered lanais or screened patios that homeowners want to upgrade to a fully enclosed space. We assess whether the existing structure can support an enclosure upgrade or needs to be rebuilt from the base, and give you an honest recommendation before you commit to a budget.
Boynton Beach homeowners who want a room they can use twelve months a year need insulated glass, thermal framing, and a ductless mini-split system sized for the South Florida heat load. The city's coastal location adds humidity and salt air on top of the standard Palm Beach County summer heat, which means climate control is not optional - it is the difference between a room you use daily and one that stays closed from June through September.
Salt air from the Atlantic Ocean is a constant in Boynton Beach, and it shortens the lifespan of standard aluminum frames noticeably for homes east of I-95. Vinyl framing does not corrode, does not require repainting, and holds up to the coastal air and summer rain that Boynton Beach properties experience every year - making it the practical long-term material choice for this city.
Boynton Beach lots east of I-95 tend to be smaller, but many still have enough rear yard space for a permitted sunroom addition that adds real usable square footage without triggering setback issues. We measure the lot, check setback requirements with the city, and design the addition so it fits within the property lines and ties correctly into the existing CBS structure.
Boynton Beach grew rapidly through the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s, and into the 2000s, leaving the city with one of the widest housing age ranges in Palm Beach County. Older neighborhoods east of I-95 have concrete block homes from the mid-20th century - some now 60 to 70 years old - while newer master-planned communities west of I-95 have homes built in the 1990s and 2000s on larger lots. Each era presents different conditions for a sunroom contractor. Older CBS homes may have original patios where the slab has shifted from decades of sandy soil movement and storm saturation. Newer homes in HOA-governed communities require design submissions and pre-approval before permits can even be applied for. A contractor who works Boynton Beach regularly has seen both and knows how to approach each without creating problems down the road.
The city's coastal location adds another layer of complexity that inland Palm Beach County towns do not face. Salt air off the Atlantic Ocean corrodes metal fasteners, frames, and hardware faster than South Florida humidity alone. Parts of Boynton Beach east of I-95 and near the Intracoastal Waterway are in FEMA-designated flood zones, which means base flood elevation requirements and flood insurance considerations factor into how outdoor structures are designed. Hurricane Wilma in 2005 caused widespread damage across the city, and the wind-load and impact-resistance standards in the Florida Building Code reflect how seriously local regulators take storm exposure here. Every outdoor structure we build in Boynton Beach is engineered to meet those standards.
Our crew works throughout Boynton Beach regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Boynton Beach Building Division for every attached structure we build here. City Hall sits on East Ocean Avenue, and the city runs its own permitting process separate from the Palm Beach County building department - which means the review contacts, inspection procedures, and code interpretations are specific to Boynton Beach. We file with this office regularly and know how to prepare permit packages that do not stall during review.
Interstate 95 divides Boynton Beach into two distinct zones, and the work in each area tends to differ. East of I-95, the neighborhoods are older, the lots are smaller, and the homes are typically CBS construction from the 1950s through 1970s - near Bethesda Hospital East and the Intracoastal Waterway. West of I-95, Boynton Beach Boulevard and Congress Avenue anchor larger commercial corridors, and the surrounding communities include newer homes from the 1990s and 2000s in subdivisions with HOA oversight. Boynton Beach Oceanfront Park and the Atlantic beach are a short drive east for residents in the central parts of the city. Whether your home is in an established older neighborhood or a newer community past Congress Avenue, we know the city well and can get to you quickly.
We also cover Delray Beach to the south and Lantana to the north, so homeowners near either city line have one number to call for all three areas.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and tell us what you are looking to build. We respond within one business day and schedule a free site visit at a time that works for your schedule.
We visit your Boynton Beach property, inspect the existing slab or patio for condition and drainage, check setback requirements, and note any flood zone considerations. You receive a written estimate before anything is committed - no pressure, no ballpark numbers.
We handle the City of Boynton Beach permit application and prepare the HOA submission package where required. Once approvals are in hand, we lock in your construction start date and keep you updated on the timeline.
Construction typically runs one to four weeks depending on the scope. We coordinate the city final inspection, secure the certificate of completion, and walk through the finished space with you before the job is closed.
We serve all of Boynton Beach, FL - east side, west side, coastal neighborhoods, and gated communities. Free written estimate, no obligation.
(561) 954-0058Boynton Beach is a city of roughly 80,000 residents in Palm Beach County, positioned between Delray Beach to the south and Lantana to the north. Interstate 95 runs north-south through the city and serves as a natural divide between the older eastern neighborhoods and the newer western communities. East of I-95, the neighborhoods tend to feature smaller lots, mature trees, and concrete block homes from the mid-20th century - many in established residential areas within a short drive of the Intracoastal Waterway and the Atlantic beach at Boynton Beach Oceanfront Park. West of I-95, development continued through the 1990s and 2000s, and the communities there include larger lots, newer construction, and subdivisions governed by homeowners associations. More details on Boynton Beach neighborhoods and city services are available through the Boynton Beach, Florida Wikipedia article.
Bethesda Hospital East is one of the city's largest employers and a regional medical center that serves a wide stretch of Palm Beach County. Boynton Beach Boulevard is the primary east-west corridor, running from the beach to communities well west of I-95, with Congress Avenue providing another major north-south spine through the city's commercial core. The Intracoastal Waterway runs along the eastern edge of the city, and homes near it deal with salt air and tidal humidity that properties further inland do not face to the same degree. For homeowners in Boynton Beach who also have property or family nearby, we cover Delray Beach to the south, so both communities can reach us through the same contact.
Enjoy your sunroom year-round with a fully insulated four-season design.
Learn MoreKeep bugs out and breezes in with a professionally installed screen room.
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Learn MoreWe serve all of Boynton Beach, FL - from the older neighborhoods east of I-95 to the newer communities out west. Call today or submit your details online and we will get back to you within one business day.