
Lake Clarke Shores Lanai Sunrooms & Patios builds four season sunrooms, screen rooms, and patio enclosures for homeowners throughout the Village of Palm Springs. We pull permits through the Village building office, understand the CBS construction common throughout the village, and have been serving Palm Beach County since 2020.

Palm Springs summers push into the low-to-mid 90s with high humidity for months at a time, and a room that is only usable from November through April is not enough for most homeowners. Our four season sunroom service includes insulated glass, climate-controlled framing, and a mini-split system sized for South Florida heat loads so your new space is comfortable every month of the year.
Palm Springs sits in the heart of Palm Beach County with drainage canals nearby, which means mosquito pressure during the rainy season from June through October is a real problem. A screen room with heavy-gauge aluminum framing and fiberglass mesh lets you sit outside in the evening without the bugs, and it is engineered to meet the wind-load requirements the Florida Building Code sets for this area.
Many Palm Springs homes from the 1950s through 1970s have concrete slabs behind the house that were poured when the village was first built. Where that slab is in good condition, we can frame a patio enclosure on top of it without replacing the floor - a significant cost savings compared to starting from bare ground.
Palm Springs sits only a few miles from the Atlantic coast, and salt air reaches even the interior streets of the village. Vinyl frames do not corrode or need repainting the way older aluminum systems do, which makes vinyl sunrooms a practical long-term choice for homeowners in this part of Palm Beach County.
Palm Springs is a compact, densely built village where most homes sit on modest lots - but many properties still have enough yard space for a properly permitted sunroom addition. We work with the existing CBS structure common in the village and design the attachment point so the addition ties in correctly rather than sitting awkwardly against the back wall.
South Florida sun is intense every month of the year, and an unshaded concrete patio in Palm Springs can reach surface temperatures that make it unusable from mid-morning onward. A solid aluminum patio cover provides shade and rain protection while keeping the outdoor space open - a good option for homeowners who are not ready for a full enclosure but want more from their backyard.
Palm Springs is a compact, incorporated village chartered in 1957 and built out quickly through the 1960s and 1970s. Most of the single-family homes here are CBS - concrete block and stucco - construction from that era, which means the building stock is now 50 to 70 years old. Older CBS homes can have slab settlement, exterior stucco cracking, and original rooflines that create complications when you are attaching new structure to them. A contractor who is not familiar with how these homes are built can cause more problems than they fix. We have worked on Palm Springs-era CBS homes enough to know where the details matter.
The village also sits on sandy, low-lying terrain with a high water table, and flat lots can hold standing water after South Florida's heavy summer rains. That drainage pattern affects concrete slabs over time and matters when you are planning an outdoor structure that will sit on or anchor to an existing pour. Beyond the soil, Palm Springs gets every seasonal challenge South Florida dishes out: summer heat in the low-to-mid 90s, daily afternoon thunderstorms from June through September, hurricane season, and salt air drifting in from the Atlantic coast a few miles east. Every one of those factors affects material selection, wind-load engineering, and how long a structure holds up without maintenance problems.
Our crew works throughout the Village of Palm Springs regularly, and we file permits through the Village of Palm Springs building office for every attached structure we build here. The village has its own municipal permitting process separate from unincorporated Palm Beach County, which means the review timelines, inspection contacts, and code interpretation can differ from what contractors working only in the county are used to. Knowing that difference up front saves time at the start of every project.
Congress Avenue is the main north-south corridor through the village, and Military Trail runs along the western edge. Lake Worth Road crosses the southern part of Palm Springs, connecting the village to Lake Worth Beach and Greenacres. Whether your home is on a side street near John I. Leonard High School or closer to the Congress Avenue commercial strip, we navigate the village well and can reach any part of it quickly. The mix of owner-occupied homes, rental units, and condo properties throughout Palm Springs means we regularly work within HOA rules as well as standard residential permit requirements.
We also cover Greenacres just to the west and Lake Worth Beach to the east, so homeowners on either side of the village line can reach us through the same number.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and describe what you have in mind. We respond within one business day and schedule a free site visit at a time that works for you.
We visit your Palm Springs property, inspect the existing slab and drainage conditions, and provide a written estimate at no cost. If the slab from a 1960s or 1970s Palm Springs home shows settling or cracking, we walk through your options before asking you to commit to anything.
Once you approve the estimate, we file the permit application with the Village of Palm Springs building office and schedule your job. We track permit status and notify you when inspections are set.
Our crew completes the build and coordinates the final inspection with the village. You receive a clean permit record documenting the work, which matters for insurance claims and future property transactions.
We serve the Village of Palm Springs and the surrounding area. Free estimates, no obligation.
(561) 954-0058The Village of Palm Springs is an incorporated municipality in central Palm Beach County with a population of around 28,000 people packed into a compact footprint. The village was chartered in 1957 and grew quickly through the 1960s and 1970s when concrete block homes were built throughout the area. Today, Palm Springs is one of the more diverse communities in Palm Beach County, with a strong mix of multigenerational households, owner-occupied homes, and rental properties. Congress Avenue runs through the center of the village and serves as the main commercial corridor for daily errands and services.
The housing stock in Palm Springs skews older compared to many surrounding communities - a large share of the single-family homes here date from the 1950s through 1970s, which means they have the original CBS construction, original slabs, and exterior stucco that are now 50 to 70 years old. Neighboring communities include West Palm Beach to the north and Lake Worth Beach to the south, both of which we also serve. The village sits in Palm Beach County's Urban Redevelopment Area designation, which has brought steady renovation and infill activity alongside the existing older building stock.
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 respond within one business day and bring the experience to handle every permit, inspection, and installation detail in the Village of Palm Springs.