
Lake Clarke Shores Lanai Sunrooms & Patios builds sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Lake Worth Beach homeowners. We know the city permit process, including historic district requirements, the salt air and humidity that coastal properties deal with, and how to attach new structures to the older homes that make up most of this city.

Adding a sunroom to a Lake Worth Beach home means working with older construction - often wood frame or early concrete block - and knowing how to attach a new structure to a wall that was built decades ago. Our sunroom addition service includes a full assessment of the existing structure, permit filing with the City of Lake Worth Beach, and construction from foundation to finish.
Lake Worth Beach lots tend to be small and close together, especially in the neighborhoods near downtown and the historic districts, and a patio enclosure is often the most practical way to add usable indoor-outdoor space without a major footprint expansion. We work in tight spaces regularly and come prepared with equipment scaled for urban residential lots.
Being this close to the Atlantic Ocean and the Lake Worth Lagoon means mosquitoes and no-see-ums are active for most of the year. A screen room is the most affordable way to reclaim your outdoor space, and we frame ours in heavy-gauge aluminum with fiberglass mesh that holds up to the salt air coming off the water far better than standard aluminum screen.
Homes near the Lake Worth Lagoon and the beach see more ambient humidity than properties a few miles inland, which makes the choice of glazing and insulation matter more than it would elsewhere. We spec low-E glass, insulated framing, and mini-split climate systems on every four-season sunroom we build in Lake Worth Beach so the room stays comfortable year-round without fighting the coastal air.
Lake Worth Beach has a large number of homes built between the 1920s and 1960s, and many of them have original Florida rooms or screened porches that are drafty, leaking, or just outdated. We remodel existing spaces with new framing, glazing, and climate systems - working around the older construction and, where required, the historic district guidelines that apply to exterior changes.
The historic cottages and older homes in Lake Worth Beach are rarely square - odd footprints, low roof lines, and irregular lot shapes are common. Custom sunroom design lets us work around those constraints rather than forcing a standard kit onto a house that was not built for one. We design each project from scratch to fit the actual space.
Lake Worth Beach has one of the largest concentrations of historic cottages in Florida, with roughly 1,000 small historic homes still standing and six designated historic districts covering parts of the city. That is not just a point of local pride - it has real implications for any contractor doing exterior work here. Homes built in the 1920s through 1940s were not constructed to modern moisture standards, and many have settled, shifted, and accumulated decades of deferred maintenance on exterior walls and foundations. Attaching a new sunroom to one of these properties requires inspecting what you are working with before drawing a plan, not after.
The coastal location adds another layer of complexity. Lake Worth Beach sits between the Atlantic Ocean and the Lake Worth Lagoon, and salt air is a constant factor for every property in the city. Metal components corrode faster here than anywhere inland. South Florida's hurricane season brings real wind and rain to this stretch of coast, and the Florida Building Code wind-load requirements for Palm Beach County exist because of that exposure. A properly designed and permitted sunroom in Lake Worth Beach is built to those standards, which matters not just for safety but for how the structure holds up after the first named storm of the season.
Our crew works throughout Lake Worth Beach regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Lake Worth Beach Building Department for every attached structure we build here. For projects in one of the city's six historic districts - College Park, Old Town, Old Lucerne, Northeast Lucerne, Southeast Lucerne, and South Palm Park - we are familiar with the additional review steps that can be required before a permit is issued for exterior changes.
We reach Lake Worth Beach via Dixie Highway (US 1) and Lake Worth Road, the two main corridors through the city. Whether your home is near downtown Lake Avenue, a few blocks from the Lake Worth Beach Casino and Beach Complex on the barrier island side, or in a quieter neighborhood near Lake Osborne, we know the city and its layout. The mix of historic cottages, older CBS homes, and newer construction means no two projects here look quite the same, and we bring the same thorough site assessment to every one.
We also serve homeowners in Lantana to the south and Greenacres to the northwest, so if your neighbor just over the city line needs the same work done, they can reach us at the same number.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form with a description of what you have in mind. We respond within one business day and schedule a free on-site visit at a time that works for your schedule.
We visit your Lake Worth Beach property, inspect the existing structure and slab, and note any conditions - older construction, coastal exposure, historic district - that affect the design or materials. You receive a written estimate at no cost, with everything explained before any contract is signed.
We file the permit with the City of Lake Worth Beach and schedule the build for when approval comes through. Standard permit reviews take two to five weeks; historic district projects may run longer depending on board meeting schedules.
Most sunroom and enclosure builds in Lake Worth Beach take two to six weeks once work begins. We do a final walk-through with you before closing the job, and we handle the city's final inspection so the permit is properly documented on your property record.
Call us or send a message and we will schedule a free on-site estimate. No pressure, no obligation - just an honest look at what your Lake Worth Beach project would take and what it would cost.
(561) 954-0058Lake Worth Beach is a small coastal city in Palm Beach County covering about seven square miles. The city sits between the Lake Worth Lagoon to the east and Lake Osborne to the west, with the Atlantic Ocean just beyond the barrier island. It has a population of roughly 35,000 to 40,000 residents and one of the most distinctive housing stocks in South Florida - roughly 1,000 historic cottages remain standing from the 1910s through 1940s, and the city officially recognizes six historic districts. These include College Park, Old Town, and South Palm Park, among others. Most of the city's homes were built before 1980, and a large share date from the 1920s through 1960s. Construction is typically concrete block or wood frame, with small lots and tight spacing common throughout the older neighborhoods.
Downtown Lake Worth Beach is centered on Lake Avenue, where independent shops, restaurants, and art venues give the city a lively, walkable character. The Lake Worth Beach Street Painting Festival draws visitors from across the region every year and is one of the city's most recognized events. Dixie Highway runs through the city as the main north-south corridor, connecting Lake Worth Beach to neighboring communities including Lantana to the south and Lake Clarke Shores to the northwest, both of which we also serve.
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.
Learn MoreConvert your open patio into a fully enclosed, comfortable sunroom.
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Learn MoreGlass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and shelter for outdoor areas.
Learn MoreOur team is ready to visit your Lake Worth Beach property, review the site, and give you a free written estimate. Call now to get your project on the schedule.