Get back your backyard. A vinyl sunroom designed for South Florida's climate gives your family a cool, bug-free room that works every month of the year - not just December.

A vinyl sunroom in Lake Clarke Shores is a fully enclosed addition built with vinyl-framed walls, large glazing panels, and a solid or glazed roof - most residential rooms are completed on-site in one to two weeks once permits are approved, with the full project timeline running six to twelve weeks from contract to finished room.
In this part of Palm Beach County, the dominant design challenge is not winter cold - it is keeping South Florida's summer heat out of the room. The glazing panels you choose determine whether your new room is genuinely comfortable from May through October or whether you end up avoiding it during the hottest months. Many homeowners in this area start the process by reviewing their sunroom design options with a contractor before selecting a material or system.
Lake Clarke Shores is a quiet waterfront community built around Lake Clarke and a network of drainage canals. Homes here sit on mostly sandy soils with higher moisture exposure than inland areas, which affects everything from slab preparation to how the vinyl frame performs over time. Getting the foundation and drainage details right from the start is just as important as the glazing choice.
If your patio sits empty most of the year because stepping outside means battling South Florida's heat, humidity, and mosquitoes, a vinyl sunroom solves that directly. You get the view and the feeling of being outdoors without any of the discomfort that keeps you inside from May through October.
If you need a playroom, home office, hobby room, or casual dining area but do not want the cost and disruption of a full interior addition, a vinyl sunroom is a practical middle ground. It adds real square footage in a matter of weeks rather than months.
A screened enclosure keeps insects out but does little for South Florida's heat. If your screen porch is uncomfortable from May through September, a vinyl sunroom with proper glazing transforms it from a seasonal space into a room you use every month of the year.
Many Lake Clarke Shores homeowners have attractive backyards or water views they want to enjoy year-round. A vinyl sunroom lets you sit surrounded by natural light and your yard while staying cool, dry, and bug-free - a combination open patios simply cannot offer.
Most vinyl sunroom projects start with an in-home visit so we can assess the existing slab or foundation, confirm setback requirements, and measure the available space accurately. At that visit we walk through glazing options - specifically the solar heat gain performance of each panel type - because that choice affects comfort and your monthly cooling bill more than any other decision in a South Florida build. For homeowners who want to connect the new room to their existing HVAC or add a dedicated mini-split, we discuss those options at this stage as well. If the project involves converting a screen enclosure, we evaluate the existing structure to determine what stays and what needs to be replaced. We also work on fully new sunroom additions where no prior enclosure exists.
Every vinyl sunroom we build goes through the Palm Beach County permitting process - no exceptions. The permit review covers the structural drawings, wind-load calculations, and glazing specifications required for this high-wind zone. If your community has a homeowners association, we prepare the architectural review package and submit both processes at the same time so there is no sequential waiting. Vinyl is a good material choice for this climate because it does not rot, rust, or need painting, but quality matters - the UV exposure here is intense and lower-grade vinyl will fade and become brittle faster than you would expect. We use UV-stabilized vinyl framing on every project. For homeowners interested in a lighter or more budget-conscious option, we can also discuss three-season sunrooms that provide weather and bug protection without full conditioning.
For homeowners who want to build a fully enclosed, glazed room onto an existing exterior wall or patio.
For homeowners who want to convert an existing screen enclosure into a fully enclosed, climate-controlled vinyl sunroom.
For homeowners who want their new room connected to their home's HVAC or fitted with a dedicated mini-split for year-round comfort.
For homeowners who want weather and bug protection at a lower cost and do not require full air conditioning connection.
Palm Beach County is in a high-wind zone under Florida's building code, which means every vinyl sunroom built here must meet wind-resistance standards that are stricter than most other parts of the country. The glazing, frame connections, and roof attachment all need to be engineered for these loads, and the county inspector confirms this at key stages of construction. A contractor who is not familiar with Palm Beach County's specific requirements - or who suggests skipping the permit to save time - is a risk you should not take. Homeowners in nearby Boynton Beach and Lake Worth Beach face the same requirements, and our team handles permits across all of these communities.
Lake Clarke Shores sits along Lake Clarke and a network of drainage canals, which means many properties have higher soil moisture, sandy subsoils, and periodic standing water near the foundation. These conditions affect how a concrete slab performs over time and how the vinyl frame base handles moisture from below. South Florida's rainy season - roughly June through September - brings daily afternoon downpours, and the roofline connection between the sunroom and your home's exterior wall is the most critical waterproofing point on the entire structure. We take that connection seriously on every build, because a poor seal here shows up within the first heavy rain season.
We measure your space, assess the existing slab or foundation, and walk through size, roof style, and glazing options. You receive a written proposal covering scope, materials, timeline, and price - no commitment required.
We submit the building permit application to Palm Beach County and, if your community requires it, prepare the HOA architectural review package. Both processes run at the same time rather than one after the other.
The crew prepares or repairs the slab, assembles the vinyl frame sections, installs the roof structure, and sets the glass panels. Connections to your home's exterior wall are sealed and flashed during this phase.
County inspections are scheduled and passed. We walk through the finished room with you, demonstrate every door and window, and leave you with copies of the permit, inspection records, and product warranties.
We respond to new estimate requests within one business day. There is no obligation until you sign a contract, and every quote is written and itemized.
We measure your space, walk you through glazing options built for South Florida's heat, and give you a written quote with no pressure.
(561) 954-0058In Palm Beach County, the glass or panel choice in a sunroom determines whether the room is comfortable or unbearable in summer. We recommend glazing rated for South Florida's solar heat gain - and we explain the ratings so you can make the decision with confidence, not just trust.
A vinyl sunroom built without a permit creates real problems when you sell or file an insurance claim in Palm Beach County. We pull our own permits and handle the county inspection process on every project - no exceptions and no shortcuts.
Many neighborhoods here have active HOAs with their own approval requirements for exterior additions. We have prepared HOA architectural review submissions for local communities and know how to run that process in parallel with county permitting so nothing slows down unnecessarily.
Vinyl sunroom problems in this climate - seal failures, fogging glass, water at the roofline - show up after the crew leaves. Our written warranty documents exactly what is covered so you have a clear path to resolution if anything needs attention after installation.
We verify Florida contractor licenses for every project through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation. For glazing performance, the National Fenestration Rating Council provides objective ratings for how well panels block heat - asking for NFRC-rated glazing is how you confirm the room will actually stay cool, not just take a contractor's word for it. Every project we deliver is fully permitted, inspected, and documented.
New sunroom additions built onto your home's existing footprint, from basic enclosures to fully conditioned four-season rooms.
Learn MoreWeather and bug protection at a more accessible price point, without the full conditioning connection of a four-season room.
Learn MoreWe handle the Palm Beach County permits and inspections so you can enjoy your new room sooner - call now or request a free estimate while summer is still coming.