Royal Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is a sunroom contractor serving The Acreage, FL, with patio enclosures, screen room installation, and sunroom additions built for the large rural lots and CBS homes of this western Palm Beach County community. We have served the area since 2017, and our crew understands the county permit process, the drainage conditions on flat acreage properties, and the site access challenges that come with working on one-acre-plus rural lots.

The Acreage homes are built with wide rear yards and generous outdoor space that stays empty most of the year because of heat, insects, and afternoon thunderstorms. Our patio enclosures turn that space into a room you can actually use - properly engineered for Palm Beach County wind loads and designed with drainage in mind from the first day of planning.
A screen room on an Acreage property lets you enjoy the views across your lot without fighting the bugs and heat that define South Florida summers. Many homes here have existing rear slabs that make a screen enclosure a straightforward installation - no new concrete work needed. We anchor every frame into the slab with the correct embedment depth for Palm Beach County high-wind requirements, using heavy-duty mesh built for daily storm exposure.
Acreage homes built between the 1980s and early 2000s have CBS walls that provide a solid anchor point for a new sunroom addition. A permitted sunroom adds appraised square footage to a home that may otherwise have limited indoor living space relative to the lot size - a practical investment for owner-occupants who plan to stay in the area long-term. We handle the permit process through Palm Beach County Building Division from start to finish.
On large rural lots where the rear of the home gets full sun exposure and little natural shade, an enclosed patio room with proper insulation and HVAC connection gives you a comfortable space to use year-round. Properties in The Acreage often have wide open rear yards with no tree canopy to block the afternoon sun - which makes the insulation and glazing choices on a new enclosure especially important for livability.
South Florida has two seasons in practice - a hot, wet summer from May through October and a drier, milder winter that runs November through April. An all season room in The Acreage is designed for both, with low-e glass that blocks heat gain during summer and an HVAC tie-in that keeps the space comfortable when afternoon temperatures push into the 90s. Equestrian property owners often find an all season room useful as an office or lounge space overlooking the paddock.
The Acreage borders the Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge, and the humidity levels near the refuge edge are consistently high year-round. Vinyl framing does not corrode, does not pit from salt-laden air, and does not require repainting on any regular schedule - advantages that matter on rural properties where exterior materials face maximum sun and moisture exposure. For Acreage homeowners who want a sunroom that holds up without constant upkeep, vinyl is a strong choice.
The Acreage is an unincorporated community covering roughly 17,000 acres in western Palm Beach County, with most properties sitting on one acre or more. The housing stock is primarily single-family CBS construction from the 1980s through the early 2000s, making most homes 20 to 45 years old. Many lots include well and septic systems rather than public utilities, outbuildings or barns, and long driveways that a delivery truck may struggle to navigate. A sunroom or enclosure project here is not a standard suburban job - it requires a contractor who plans for rural site conditions before arriving on day one.
The land throughout The Acreage is flat and sandy, with poor natural drainage. After the heavy afternoon thunderstorms that run from June through September, standing water on yards and around home foundations is common. This drainage reality affects how a patio enclosure or sunroom must be designed - the perimeter needs to be graded away from the structure, and the base should sit above grade where the lot allows it. The Palm Beach County planning requirements for the Acreage-Loxahatchee area apply to all new structures here, including high-wind engineering standards that must be built into the design from the start.
Our crew works throughout The Acreage regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Because The Acreage is unincorporated, all permits go through the Palm Beach County Planning, Zoning and Building Division rather than a local city office - a process we are familiar with from the many jobs we have completed in this community.
Most Acreage residents use Royal Palm Beach and Wellington for shopping, dining, and services, and many of the back roads through The Acreage are familiar to our team. Acreage Community Park sits near the center of the community and is a reference point locals use when describing their location. Northlake Boulevard is one of the main east-west roads through the northern part of the area, and Southern Boulevard and Okeechobee Boulevard handle most of the traffic moving east toward Wellington and Royal Palm Beach. Many properties we visit here have horse paddocks, detached garages, or working wells - we plan for all of that before we arrive.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Loxahatchee Groves to the south, which shares many of the same rural property conditions, and in Palm Beach Gardens to the northeast.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. Let us know your property address and a brief description of what you are hoping to add - that helps us plan the right amount of time for the site visit.
We visit the property, assess the slab, drainage, access, and any site-specific conditions - including well and septic locations if they affect the work area - and provide a written estimate with no obligation. On large rural lots, this assessment takes more time than a standard suburban property visit, and we include that detail in our scheduling.
We handle the Palm Beach County permit application and submit all required drawings and documentation. Once the county approves the permit, we schedule construction. You do not need to coordinate with the county - we manage that process and keep you informed on the timeline.
After construction is complete, we schedule the county final inspection and walk through the finished space with you to confirm everything is right. Any remaining items are resolved before we close out the permit and consider the job complete.
We serve The Acreage and surrounding western Palm Beach County communities. No obligation, no pressure.
(561) 359-1679The Acreage is a large unincorporated community in western Palm Beach County, covering roughly 17,000 acres and home to more than 38,000 residents. Unlike neighboring Wellington or Royal Palm Beach, The Acreage has no city government - it falls under Palm Beach County directly. The community was developed primarily between the late 1970s and early 2000s as a rural residential area, and that rural character has been actively protected through county planning efforts. Nearly all homes are detached single-family houses on one-acre or larger lots, and the equestrian lifestyle is a defining feature of many properties. Most homes are concrete block and stucco construction from the development era, putting them at 20 to 45 years old today. Many properties rely on private wells and septic systems rather than public utilities, which is a practical reality that affects site planning on most jobs we do here. The community is described in detail through the Palm Beach County Western Communities planning area.
Most Acreage residents travel east to Wellington and Royal Palm Beach for shopping, restaurants, and services - Wellington is just a few miles away and is a hub for the broader western communities area. To the south, Loxahatchee Groves is a smaller incorporated town with a similar rural character that borders The Acreage along the south. To the northeast, Palm Beach Gardens is a larger, more developed city that contrasts sharply with the open, rural feel of The Acreage. The Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge borders the western edge of the community, which means residents deal with the full intensity of South Florida heat, humidity, and storm exposure - and that shapes how we approach every project out here.
Keep insects out while enjoying fresh air in a screened outdoor room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed, functional sunroom.
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Learn MoreCall us or request a free estimate online. We respond within one business day and will schedule a site visit at your Acreage property.