
Lake Worth Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is a local sunroom contractor serving Boynton Beach, FL with sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen room installation. We work on homes throughout Boynton Beach - from the 1960s CBS ranches near the inlet to the HOA communities off Congress Avenue - and we carry every project through Palm Beach County permitting from start to final inspection.

Boynton Beach homeowners who have been in their homes for decades often find that adding a sunroom is the most cost-effective way to get new living space without moving. Our sunroom additions are designed around your existing home - the slab, the roofline, the exterior wall - so the finished room looks like it was always part of the house.
Many Boynton Beach homes from the 1970s and 1980s have an open rear patio slab that sits unused most of the year because of the heat, humidity, and insects. Enclosing that existing concrete with screens, glass, or a combination of both turns unused square footage into a room you can actually use.
The insects and afternoon rain near Oceanfront Park and the neighborhoods west of Federal Highway make outdoor living in Boynton Beach a seasonal event without proper screening. A framed screen enclosure keeps the insects out and the breeze in - the most affordable way to reclaim your outdoor space.
Boynton Beach has a long retirement and snowbird community, and many homeowners here want a comfortable room they can use whether it is 90 degrees in August or 55 degrees on a January evening. A fully insulated and climate-controlled sunroom is comfortable year-round and adds measurable home value in this market.
Homes near the Boynton Beach Inlet take regular salt air exposure that corrodes painted steel framing within a few years. Vinyl framing doesn't rust, doesn't need repainting, and holds up in coastal conditions far longer than alternatives - an important consideration for any Boynton Beach home within a mile or two of the coast.
A significant share of Boynton Beach homes built in the 1970s and 1980s have an existing Florida room that was added without hurricane-rated glass or a proper flashing connection at the roofline. Remodeling that room to current code - new glazing, new roof connection, updated framing - is often faster and less expensive than demolishing and starting over.
Boynton Beach sits directly on the Atlantic Ocean. Homes within a mile or two of the coast - particularly those near the Boynton Beach Inlet and the neighborhoods east of Federal Highway - deal with salt air exposure that is hard on every exterior material that isn't rated for coastal conditions. Metal fasteners corrode, painted aluminum frames pit and stain, and glazing seals break down faster than they would in a drier inland climate. Any sunroom or enclosure built in Boynton Beach needs to be spec'd for this environment from the beginning - not adapted from a product line designed for suburban Ohio or central Florida.
The housing stock here adds another layer of complexity. About half of Boynton Beach's homes were built between 1960 and 1990 in concrete block construction. These homes are durable, but their slabs may have settled, their rooflines weren't designed for additions, and their wall connections need careful attention when attaching a new structure. Newer subdivisions built since 2000 - mostly in western Boynton Beach - present different challenges: tile roofs, HOA architectural controls, and tighter lot coverage limits. Palm Beach County's hurricane zone building code applies to every job regardless of location, and a contractor who doesn't regularly pull permits in this county won't know current review timelines or documentation requirements.
Our crew works throughout Boynton Beach regularly, and we pull permits through Palm Beach County Building Division for every project in the city. We are familiar with the range of properties here - from the older CBS ranch homes in the neighborhoods east of Federal Highway to the newer tile-roof subdivisions off Congress Avenue and Boynton Beach Boulevard in the western part of the city.
Congress Avenue is the main north-south corridor through western Boynton Beach, and many of the area's 55-plus communities and HOA-governed neighborhoods sit in that corridor. We work in HOA communities regularly and understand the architectural review process - getting that approval before the county permit is filed matters for your timeline, and we help you navigate both steps. Homes closer to the inlet deal with heavier salt air exposure and tend to need coastal-grade framing and hardware regardless of budget level.
We also serve homeowners in Delray Beach, FL to the south, where the housing stock and permit process are very similar, and in Lantana, FL to the north. If you are in any of these areas and want an honest assessment of your home before committing to a project, give us a call.
Contact us by phone or through the estimate form. We reply within one business day to schedule your site visit - no waiting weeks to hear back.
We visit your Boynton Beach property to look at the existing slab, the roofline attachment point, and any HOA or lot coverage constraints that affect scope. You get a written itemized estimate - not a ballpark - before anything is signed.
We handle the Palm Beach County permit application - plans, wind-load calculations, and all required documents. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we coordinate that review in parallel so the two approval processes don't stack end to end and extend your timeline unnecessarily.
Once permits are approved, construction begins on a confirmed schedule. We walk you through the finished room at completion, confirm all county inspections are closed, and leave you with a clean copy of the permit documentation for your records.
We serve homeowners throughout Boynton Beach - from homes near the inlet to communities off Congress Avenue. Get a written estimate at no charge.
(561) 954-1564Boynton Beach is one of the larger cities in Palm Beach County, with roughly 80,000 residents spread across a mix of older beachside neighborhoods and newer subdivisions extending west toward the county line. The city runs from the Atlantic Ocean at Oceanfront Park and the Boynton Beach Inlet all the way out to the large communities off Congress Avenue and Boynton Beach Boulevard in the west. The residential stock is a wide range: single-story CBS ranch homes built in the 1960s and 1970s closer to the coast, tile-roof single-family homes and townhome communities from the 1990s and 2000s further west, and a large concentration of 55-plus communities and retirement-oriented neighborhoods throughout.
The city has a strong homeowner base - about 55 percent of homes are owner-occupied - and many long-term residents who have been in their properties for decades. The combination of an aging housing stock, a large retired population, and the constant pressure of South Florida's coastal climate means there is steady demand for home improvement work here, particularly for projects that make existing outdoor space more functional. Neighboring Lake Worth, FL to the north and Delray Beach, FL to the south share many of the same housing characteristics and permit processes.
Keep insects out while enjoying fresh air in a screened outdoor room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
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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 MoreWhether your home is near the Boynton Beach Inlet or in one of the western communities, we serve all of Boynton Beach - call today to schedule your no-charge site visit.