
Lake Clarke Shores Lanai Sunrooms & Patios installs screen rooms, patio enclosures, and sunroom additions for Lantana homeowners on both the mainland and the barrier island side of town. We file permits through the Town of Lantana Building Department, understand the mid-century CBS homes common here, and have served Palm Beach County since 2020.

Lantana sits on the Atlantic coast and along the Intracoastal Waterway, where salt air and coastal humidity are a constant. Our screen room service uses heavy-gauge aluminum frames with a powder-coat finish rated for coastal environments and fiberglass mesh that resists UV and salt-air corrosion - so you get a room you can actually use for years without constant maintenance.
Lantana lots are compact, and most homes sit close together, but a well-designed patio enclosure can make a small backyard feel like a real extension of the house. Where an original concrete slab is still level and in good shape, we can frame directly on it without a new pour - which keeps the project straightforward on these smaller Lantana properties.
Mid-century CBS homes in Lantana are solid structures, but they need proper attachment detailing when you add new structure to the back. We assess the existing block wall and foundation before designing the addition, so the new room ties in correctly and does not create a gap or moisture pathway between the addition and the original house.
Lantana's winters are mild and pleasant, but summers are hot and humid from May through October. A fully insulated four season room with low-E glass and a ductless mini-split system lets Lantana homeowners use the space every month of the year, not just during the dry season when the weather cooperates.
An enclosed patio room gives Lantana homeowners a bug-free, weather-protected outdoor living space without the full climate-control cost of a four season room. It is a popular choice in this town because the mild Lantana winters make a lightly enclosed space usable for most of the year with just the natural breeze.
For Lantana homeowners on the barrier island side of town, vinyl frame systems are a smart choice because they do not corrode in the heavy salt air environment the way standard aluminum frames can over time. Vinyl holds its finish without repainting and requires less maintenance year to year - an important consideration this close to the ocean.
Lantana is a small coastal town covering under three square miles, with part of it sitting on a barrier island between the Intracoastal Waterway and the Atlantic Ocean. That geography creates a set of conditions that directly affect how outdoor structures are designed, built, and maintained here. Salt air reaches every part of town - not just the island side - and it accelerates corrosion on metal frames, fasteners, hinges, and screen mesh faster than homeowners from inland areas typically expect. Getting the material specification wrong on a Lantana job means the structure starts failing within a few years instead of lasting a few decades.
The housing stock adds another layer of complexity. A large share of Lantana's homes were built in the 1950s through 1970s - concrete block construction that is now 50 to 70 years old. These homes are solid, but aging CBS structures can have slab settlement, stucco cracks, and roof attachments that need to be evaluated before new structure is added to them. Lantana also sits at very low elevation, just a few feet above sea level, with the Intracoastal to the west and the ocean to the east. Flood zone designations cover much of the town, and storm surge is a real risk during hurricane season. Every outdoor structure we build in Lantana is engineered to meet the wind-load requirements the Florida Building Code sets for this coastal exposure zone.
Our crew works in Lantana regularly, and we file permits through the Town of Lantana Building Department for every attached structure we build here. Lantana has been an incorporated town since 1921 and runs its own permitting process distinct from Palm Beach County's unincorporated areas - review timelines, inspection contacts, and code interpretations in Lantana are not the same as what contractors working the broader county are used to. Knowing that difference at the start of a project is how you avoid delays.
Interstate 95 runs through Lantana with its own interchange, making the town easy to reach from both north and south along the coast. U.S. Route 1, locally known as Dixie Highway, is the main north-south road through the town closer to the water. The streets on the barrier island side of the Intracoastal are narrower and the lots are smaller, which affects how we move equipment onto the site. Whether your home is near Lantana Public Beach on the island side or in a neighborhood on the mainland near Dixie Highway, we know the town and can get there without delays.
We also serve Boynton Beach immediately to the south and Lake Worth Beach to the north, so homeowners on either side of the Lantana town line can reach us through the same number.
Reach us by phone or the contact form and tell us what you are thinking. We respond within one business day and set a free site visit at a time that works for your schedule.
We visit your Lantana property and inspect the existing slab, drainage conditions, and any attachment points on the home. If the slab has settlement issues or the site has drainage concerns typical of this low-elevation town, we walk through your options before any contract is signed - at no cost to you.
After you approve the estimate, we file the permit application with the Town of Lantana Building Department and get your job on the schedule. We track the permit through review and notify you when inspections are lined up.
Our crew completes the build using materials specified for Lantana's coastal environment. We coordinate the final inspection with the town, and you walk away with a clean permit record - important if you ever need to file a storm damage claim.
We work throughout the Town of Lantana on both the mainland and island side. No obligation, no pressure.
(561) 954-0058The Town of Lantana is a small, incorporated coastal community in Palm Beach County with about 11,500 residents spread across less than three square miles - roughly a fifth of which is water. The town has a barrier island section along the Atlantic Ocean connected to the mainland by bridge, with the Intracoastal Waterway running between them. Lantana Public Beach sits at the eastern end of town and is one of the defining features of daily life here. U.S. Route 1, known locally as Dixie Highway, runs north-south through the mainland portion and is the main commercial corridor lined with small shops, restaurants, and service businesses.
Most of Lantana's residential neighborhoods were built in the post-World War II boom through the 1970s, and the mid-century CBS homes on both the mainland and island sides of town are the dominant housing type. Interstate 95 has a dedicated Lantana interchange that makes the town accessible from both north and south. Neighboring communities include Lake Worth Beach directly to the north and Boynton Beach to the south, both of which we serve as well. Nearly one in five Lantana residents is 65 or older, and the town has a practical, close-knit character that reflects its size and history as one of Palm Beach County's older incorporated towns.
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.
Learn MoreTransform your existing deck into a weather-protected sunroom space.
Learn MoreGlass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and shelter for outdoor areas.
Learn MoreCall today or submit a free estimate request. We know Lantana's coastal conditions, permitting process, and mid-century building stock - and we bring that knowledge to every job in town.