
Lake Worth Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is a local sunroom contractor serving Boca Raton, FL with four season sunrooms, sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen room installation. We work throughout Boca Raton's gated communities and established neighborhoods - on the stucco-over-CBS construction homes that define the city's housing stock - with full City of Boca Raton permit handling and HOA coordination included, and we respond to every inquiry within one business day.

Boca Raton homeowners who invest in their properties expect an addition that functions year-round - not just in the mild winter months. Our four season sunrooms are built with insulated framing, impact-rated low-e glass, and climate control so the space holds up through a humid South Florida August and stays comfortable through a January afternoon - giving you a room that earns its square footage throughout the year.
Most Boca Raton homes were built between the 1970s and 1990s with stucco exteriors and slab foundations - and at 30 to 50 years old, many of these properties are getting their first major addition rather than a repair. The stucco-over-CBS construction that is nearly universal across the city requires proper flashing and waterproofing at the point where the new structure meets the existing wall, which is where work done without that knowledge fails.
Single-family homes throughout Boca Raton commonly have concrete slab patios and screened lanais that were designed decades ago and no longer meet HOA or building standards. Enclosing or upgrading an existing patio with a properly permitted and engineered structure brings it current - and protects it from the roughly 60 inches of annual rainfall that moves through this part of South Florida each year.
Larger properties in West Boca - the newer, more spacious communities that grew up from the 1990s onward - often have the footprint and the HOA aesthetic standards to support a custom-designed enclosed room that goes well beyond a stock kit. We design to the specific dimensions of your lot, your roofline, and your community's architectural requirements.
Boca Raton's summer afternoons bring intense heat, daily thunderstorms, and the insect pressure that comes with South Florida's wet season. A framed screen enclosure built to Florida Building Code wind standards is the most cost-effective way to reclaim a backyard slab and make it usable through the evening hours and the weekend mornings when you actually want to be outside.
Vinyl framing holds up particularly well in Boca Raton's coastal-adjacent climate, where the combination of salt air, humidity, and intense UV can corrode aluminum and degrade painted wood finishes faster than homeowners expect. For many Boca Raton homes within a few miles of the Intracoastal, vinyl is the low-maintenance material choice that makes the most sense over a 20-year horizon.
Boca Raton's housing stock is concentrated in the 30 to 50 year age range, built primarily from the 1970s through the 1990s. At that age, stucco exteriors, slab finishes, pool decks, and existing patio enclosures are reaching or past the end of their expected service life. Stucco is the dominant exterior finish across virtually every residential neighborhood in the city - from the gated communities in the west to the condo corridors near the coast. In South Florida's heat and humidity, stucco develops cracks over time, and any crack near a roofline junction or window frame that is not properly sealed becomes a path for water into the block wall. A sunroom or enclosed patio added to a Boca Raton home without correct flashing at the junction with the existing stucco wall is the most common reason additions fail inspection or develop water problems within a few years.
Boca Raton also sits squarely in South Florida's hurricane belt, and the city has its own building department with Florida Building Code wind-load requirements that govern all enclosed structures. Beyond the city permit process, dozens of Boca Raton's gated and master-planned communities - Boca West, Broken Sound, Woodfield Country Club, and many others - layer HOA Architectural Review Committee approval on top of the city permit. A contractor who has not dealt with both processes before will cause delays that can set a project back by weeks. We know how the City of Boca Raton Building Division process works and what individual HOA review committees typically need to approve an exterior addition.
Our crew works throughout Boca Raton regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Boca Raton Building Division for every project within the city limits. Because Boca Raton is an incorporated city with its own permit office - separate from Palm Beach County's system - project timelines here can differ from those in unincorporated parts of the county. We know the local review cycle and build accurate permit timelines into every estimate.
Boca Raton is organized around a few major east-west corridors - Glades Road, Palmetto Park Road, and Camino Real - with the Intracoastal Waterway defining the eastern edge of the city. Downtown Boca, centered around Mizner Park, is a landmark most homeowners know well. Town Center at Boca Raton on Glades Road is another daily reference point. West Boca Raton, which stretches toward the western city limits along Lyons Road and beyond, has a different character from the eastern neighborhoods - larger lots, newer construction, and communities built primarily after 1990.
We serve the full coastal corridor from Boca Raton north to Lake Worth Beach. Homeowners in Delray Beach - Boca Raton's direct neighbor to the north - often call us for the same reasons Boca homeowners do: stucco CBS homes, HOA communities, and a climate that demands impact-rated, properly sealed enclosures. We know what this part of the coast looks like from the inside.
Call or submit an estimate request online. We respond to every Boca Raton inquiry within one business day to set up a site visit. If your community has gated access, just let us know when you submit - we arrange access before showing up.
We visit your Boca Raton property, assess the slab, existing stucco condition, roofline, and any HOA requirements, and provide a written estimate with a fixed scope and price. This is where we identify conditions - like aged stucco at the tie-in zone - that need to be addressed in the project scope, so there are no surprises after you sign.
We submit the City of Boca Raton building permit and prepare the documentation your HOA review committee needs. Both processes run at the same time where possible, and we track both for you so neither process waits on the other unnecessarily.
Active construction on a typical Boca Raton sunroom addition takes three to five weeks. We schedule the city final inspection, walk through the completed room with you, and close out the permit so the project is on record with the city.
We serve homeowners throughout Boca Raton and the surrounding South Palm Beach County communities. Call us or submit a request below - we respond within one business day.
(561) 954-1564Boca Raton is an incorporated city in southern Palm Beach County with a population of around 97,000 people and a housing market that consistently ranks among the most valuable in Florida. The city has a split character: the older, eastern neighborhoods closer to the Intracoastal and the Atlantic - anchored by landmarks like the Boca Raton Resort and Club and Mizner Park - tend to have older, denser housing with smaller lots. The western side of the city, often called West Boca, has larger homes on bigger lots, many built from the 1990s onward, with tile roofs and paver driveways. Dozens of gated and master-planned communities are spread throughout both halves of the city, and HOA governance is a routine part of home ownership for the majority of Boca Raton residents. Florida Atlantic University anchors the central part of the city along Glades Road, creating a more transient residential zone near campus within an otherwise long-term-owner-occupant city. More background on the city is available at the Boca Raton Wikipedia page.
To the north, Boca Raton borders Delray Beach, a city with a similar mix of owner-occupied homes and HOA communities where we also work regularly. To the north of Delray lies Boynton Beach, and further north is Lake Worth Beach - the full south Palm Beach County coastal corridor we serve. Boca Raton is the southernmost city in our service area, and the homes here at the southern end of the county share many of the same construction characteristics and climate demands as every city in between.
Keep insects out while enjoying fresh air in a screened outdoor room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreTurn your deck into a comfortable, weather-protected sunroom room.
Learn MoreYear-round rooms built to handle Florida heat and occasional chilly nights.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers providing shade and protection for outdoor spaces.
Learn MoreWe work throughout Boca Raton and the surrounding South Palm Beach County communities. Call us today or submit a request - we respond within one business day.