
Lake Clarke Shores Lanai Sunrooms & Patios installs solariums, sunroom additions, and screen rooms for homeowners throughout Palm Beach Gardens, FL, navigating gated community HOA approvals, city permits, and Florida Building Code wind-load requirements. We have served northern Palm Beach County since 2020 and know the communities around PGA Boulevard, the Turnpike corridor, and everything in between.

Palm Beach Gardens has some of the most light-filled residential lots in Palm Beach County, and homeowners in the city's golf-course communities and lakeside neighborhoods often want a dedicated glass room that brings that outdoor environment inside year-round. Our solarium installation service uses low-E insulated glass, thermally broken framing, and climate control designed for the South Florida heat load, so your solarium is usable every month of the year - not just in winter.
Many Palm Beach Gardens communities were built in the 1980s and 1990s with covered lanais that homeowners now want to convert into fully enclosed sunrooms. Lot setbacks in this city's master-planned communities vary by HOA zone, and we verify the rear and side yard clearances before drawing a single plan so you know exactly what size addition is possible on your property.
Palm Beach Gardens homeowners who want a room they can use from January through September need insulated glass and a properly sized ductless climate system - not just a screen room. The coastal proximity to the Atlantic means summer humidity is higher here than in inland Palm Beach County towns, and a four season sunroom with thermal framing handles both the heat and the moisture that come with the territory.
In Palm Beach Gardens, afternoon thunderstorms from May through September make unprotected patios difficult to use for nearly half the year. A screen room with fiberglass mesh and corrosion-resistant aluminum framing keeps the bugs and rain out without blocking the breeze from the Atlantic a few miles east, making it one of the most practical upgrades for a Gardens property.
Palm Beach Gardens has a wide range of property types - from modest ranch homes in older neighborhoods near Military Trail to large estate properties in golf-course communities. A custom-designed sunroom fits the footprint, roofline, and exterior finish of your specific house rather than forcing a standard kit onto a structure it was not designed for, and meets the HOA design standards that most Gardens communities require before approving exterior additions.
Gated communities throughout Palm Beach Gardens - from neighborhoods near PGA National Resort to communities along Hood Road - often have existing covered patios that owners want to enclose for protection from summer storms and year-round insect pressure. We assess the existing structure, confirm HOA material requirements, and build the enclosure so it passes both city inspection and HOA review the first time.
Palm Beach Gardens was developed as a planned city beginning in the 1960s, and most of its residential neighborhoods were built between the 1970s and the 2000s. That construction era means homes here are almost universally concrete block with stucco exteriors - the standard South Florida building method that holds up to heat, humidity, and hurricane-force winds better than wood framing. But CBS homes from the 1970s and 1980s are now 40 to 50 years old, and the covered lanais and patios from that era often show signs of their age: hairline cracks in the slab, failing caulk around framing, corroded aluminum from decades of salt air off the Atlantic. A contractor who works this market regularly recognizes those conditions and knows how to assess whether existing structure can carry an addition or needs to be rebuilt from the footer up.
The planned, gated character of Palm Beach Gardens creates a layer of process that does not exist in most South Florida cities. A significant share of properties belong to homeowners associations with architectural review boards that must approve exterior additions before a building permit can even be filed with the city. These review boards vary in how detailed their requirements are - some approve with a simple drawing, others require material samples, color matches, and engineering calculations. The Florida Building Code also sets specific wind-load requirements for enclosed structures in Palm Beach County's coastal wind zone, which affects the structural design of any sunroom addition. Working in this city means handling both the HOA process and the city permit process simultaneously, and staying on top of both to keep the project moving.
Our crew works throughout Palm Beach Gardens regularly, and we file building permits through the City of Palm Beach Gardens Building Division for every attached structure we build here. Palm Beach Gardens runs its own permitting process through City Hall on Avenue of the Champions, and the city's building department handles reviews separately from Palm Beach County - which means the contacts, inspection sequencing, and plan review timeline are specific to this municipality. We prepare permit packages for this office regularly and know what documentation is required to avoid review delays.
PGA Boulevard is the spine of Palm Beach Gardens, running east from I-95 past The Gardens Mall and PGA National Resort toward the coast. Most of the city's gated residential communities are organized north and south of this corridor, and Florida's Turnpike creates the western boundary for most of the developed area. Older ranch-style homes sit in neighborhoods near Military Trail and Northlake Boulevard, while newer communities with larger lots extend out toward the Turnpike. Whether your home is in a golf-course community near PGA National or a quiet neighborhood west of Military Trail, we know this city's roads, permit office, and HOA landscape well.
We also cover Riviera Beach to the south and West Palm Beach along the corridor toward Lake Clarke Shores, so homeowners near either city boundary have one contractor to call across all three areas.
Reach us by phone at (561) 954-0058 or through the contact form on this site. We respond within one business day and will ask a few questions about your property, the type of structure you want, and whether your community has HOA requirements we need to factor in from the start.
We visit your property to measure the space, assess the existing slab or foundation, confirm lot setbacks with city records, and review any HOA architectural guidelines that apply. The estimate we provide is written, itemized, and covers the full scope - no surprises added after you sign. There is no charge for the estimate.
We prepare and submit the HOA architectural application and the city building permit application. For gated communities in Palm Beach Gardens, HOA review typically runs two to six weeks before an approval letter is issued. We track both processes and keep you updated so you know where the project stands.
Once permits are in hand, construction typically takes two to four weeks depending on the structure type and size. We schedule and manage all required city inspections, and you receive copies of all permit and inspection documentation when the project is complete.
We serve all of Palm Beach Gardens, FL - from PGA Boulevard communities to neighborhoods near the Turnpike. Free estimates, no obligation.
(561) 954-0058Palm Beach Gardens is a city in northern Palm Beach County covering roughly 55 square miles between I-95 to the east and Florida's Turnpike to the west. Originally developed as a planned city in the 1960s, it grew rapidly through the 1980s and 1990s into a community of over 50,000 residents. The city is organized around PGA Boulevard, its main east-west corridor, which connects the interstate to the coast and passes through commercial districts anchored by The Gardens Mall and the well-known PGA National Resort. Residential neighborhoods range from older ranch-style homes near Military Trail to large estate properties in gated communities laid out around golf courses and lakes throughout the city.
The housing stock in Palm Beach Gardens is predominantly concrete block with stucco exteriors, built in multiple waves from the 1970s through the 2000s. A large portion of properties are in HOA-governed communities, each with its own architectural standards and review process. The city sits close enough to the Atlantic that coastal salt air is a factor for nearly every home here, and its flat, low-lying terrain means drainage and soil conditions are a regular consideration for outdoor structures. For homeowners in Riviera Beach just to the south or Royal Palm Beach to the west, we cover those areas as well.
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 us today or submit a free estimate request - we cover all of Palm Beach Gardens and respond within one business day.