
Lake Worth Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is a local sunroom contractor serving Palm Springs, FL with screen room installation, patio enclosures, and sunroom conversions. We work on the postwar CBS ranch homes that fill the village, and we handle every project through Palm Beach County permitting - with a response to new inquiries within one business day.

Palm Springs drainage canals and flat terrain create standing water after summer storms, which means mosquito pressure is real from June through October. Our screen room installations let Palm Springs homeowners use their backyard patio year-round without fighting insects or afternoon rain.
Most Palm Springs ranch homes sit on small to medium lots with a concrete slab out back that goes unused for much of the year. Enclosing that slab with a screened, vinyl-glazed, or acrylic panel system adds a livable room to your home without digging a new foundation or touching the existing structure.
Older Palm Springs homes built in the 1950s through 1970s often have an existing rear slab that has never been enclosed. Converting it into a glass-walled or vinyl-glazed sunroom is typically less expensive than a ground-up addition because the concrete base is already in place and the footprint is already permitted.
South Florida's UV intensity and seasonal humidity cause painted aluminum frames to fade and oxidize within a few years. Vinyl framing holds its color without repainting under Palm Springs conditions, keeping the room looking clean longer and reducing the maintenance cost homeowners face over time.
About half of Palm Springs housing units are owner-occupied homes, and many of those owners want a room that stays comfortable year-round, not just in winter. A fully insulated and climate-controlled sunroom turns a rear slab into a true living space that works even during a South Florida July.
Some Palm Springs homes from the 1980s have a screened porch or Florida room that was built without hurricane-rated framing or proper flashing at the roofline. Bringing that existing space up to current Palm Beach County code - new screens, updated frame, sealed roof joint - is often more cost-effective than demolishing and rebuilding from scratch.
Palm Springs is a landlocked village of about 24,000 people that was almost entirely built out between the 1950s and the 1980s. Most homes here are single-story CBS ranch houses sitting on small lots - compact, well-established properties where owners are more likely to be upgrading or enclosing what they have than building something new. At 30 to 70 years old, the existing patios, slabs, and older Florida rooms on many of these homes show their age. Slab cracking from soil movement, screen frames corroded by years of humidity, and roof joints that let water in at the wall connection are the issues we see most often when we assess Palm Springs properties.
The climate here hits homes from multiple angles year-round. Summer brings daily afternoon rain from June through September, often five to seven inches per month, and the flat terrain throughout Palm Springs means drainage must be actively designed into every enclosure project - not assumed. The intense Florida sun breaks down screen mesh, painted frames, and caulking faster than in northern climates. And while Palm Springs sits about five to six miles from the coast, onshore salt air still reaches the area on prevailing winds, adding to corrosion on metal fasteners and untreated aluminum. A contractor who works regularly in this area designs for all of these conditions from the start.
Our crew works throughout Palm Springs regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The village is bounded by West Palm Beach to the north and Lake Worth Beach to the south, with South Military Trail running through as the main commercial road. Most residential neighborhoods are east and west of that corridor - quiet streets with one-story homes on modest lots that have not changed much in layout or character since they were built.
Building permits for Palm Springs projects are pulled through Palm Beach County's Building Division, not a separate municipal office. That is the same process we handle regularly for neighboring communities, so there are no surprises on permit timelines. We check slab condition carefully on every Palm Springs site visit - older slabs in this area are often thinner than current code requires, and identifying that early changes both the scope and the cost estimate before anything is signed.
We also serve homeowners in the adjacent Greenacres, FL and throughout nearby Lake Worth Beach, FL, so our crew is in this part of Palm Beach County consistently.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form, and we respond within one business day. We ask a few quick questions about your slab size and what type of enclosure you have in mind so the site visit is focused.
We visit your Palm Springs home to measure the slab, inspect the existing structure, and check drainage around the perimeter. You will receive a written, itemized quote - not an estimate range - before you commit to anything.
We submit plans and structural drawings to Palm Beach County's Building Division and track the review. Palm Springs permits typically take one to three weeks to approve, and we give you an updated schedule once the permit is in hand.
Most screen room and enclosure installations in Palm Springs take one to three weeks of on-site work. We schedule all county inspections, walk you through the completed room, and make sure everything passes final inspection before we leave.
We serve Palm Springs homeowners directly - no subcontractors, no call centers. Reach out and we respond within one business day.
(561) 954-1564Palm Springs is a small, incorporated village in Palm Beach County with about 24,000 residents, bordered by West Palm Beach to the north and Lake Worth Beach to the south. The village has essentially no undeveloped land left - it was built out during South Florida's postwar suburban expansion from the 1950s through the 1980s. The result is a compact, fully residential community dominated by one-story concrete block ranch homes on small to medium lots, with a modest commercial strip along South Military Trail serving everyday needs. It is the kind of neighborhood where homeowners have often lived for decades and are more focused on maintaining and improving what they have than on moving elsewhere.
The village has a notably diverse population and a working-class character compared to wealthier neighbors like Palm Beach proper. Community life centers on the Village of Palm Springs Community Center, local parks, and the practical rhythm of a neighborhood where most residents work, raise families, and take care of their homes. Nearby West Palm Beach, FL sits just to the north, and the barrier island communities of Lake Worth Beach, FL are easily accessible to the east.
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 MorePalm Springs homeowners who call now can typically get a site visit scheduled within the week - reach out and we will get back to you within one business day.