Royal Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is a sunroom contractor serving West Palm Beach, FL, offering sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen room installation for homeowners throughout the city. We have served the Palm Beach County area since 2017, and every project we complete is permitted through the City of West Palm Beach Building Division and built to current Florida wind-load standards.

A lot of West Palm Beach homes have covered patios or lanais that sit empty through the summer because there is no shade or cooling. A proper sunroom addition converts that space into a climate-controlled room that works year-round, using impact-rated glass rated for coastal wind exposure.
West Palm Beach sits close enough to the Intracoastal and the coast that mosquitoes are active nearly year-round. A screen room built to current Palm Beach County wind-load codes gives you an outdoor space that actually functions in the evening without bugs or the full heat of an enclosed room.
Many West Palm Beach homes have an existing concrete slab that was never developed into usable space. Enclosing that slab with a screened or glass structure uses the existing foundation and keeps project costs lower than starting from scratch in a yard with uncertain soil conditions.
West Palm Beach has a wide range of architectural styles, from 1920s Mediterranean Revival homes in El Cid to 1970s CBS ranches and newer downtown condos. A custom design matches the existing roofline, exterior finish, and architectural style so the addition does not look like an afterthought.
Coastal humidity and prolonged summer heat in West Palm Beach mean a standard Florida room with single-pane jalousie panels is uncomfortable from May through October. A fully insulated, four season sunroom with low-e glass and a dedicated AC line stays comfortable even on the hottest and most humid days of the year.
Older screen enclosures and Florida rooms in West Palm Beach often show corrosion on aluminum frames from salt air exposure, cracked caulk at the roofline, and screen mesh that no longer keeps out no-see-ums. Remodeling an existing structure is usually faster and less disruptive than a full teardown and rebuild.
West Palm Beach is Palm Beach County's largest city, and its housing stock spans nearly a century. Homes in neighborhoods like Flamingo Park and El Cid were built as early as the 1920s using Mediterranean Revival styles with clay barrel tile roofs and original stucco exteriors. Attaching a sunroom addition to a historic-era home requires different anchoring methods than working on the CBS construction that dominates the 1950s through 1980s neighborhoods further west. A contractor who has only worked on newer suburban homes may not recognize the difference until something goes wrong on site.
Proximity to the Atlantic and the Intracoastal Waterway means salt air works on metal fasteners, aluminum frames, and exterior caulk every day. West Palm Beach also gets roughly 63 inches of rain per year, most of it falling in intense summer thunderstorms. Structures that are not properly flashed and sealed at the roof-to-wall connection will leak. Wind-load requirements here reflect the coastal exposure, and any enclosure built below current standards puts your investment at risk when hurricane season arrives each June.
Our crew works throughout West Palm Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of West Palm Beach Development Services and are familiar with how the city handles residential addition permits for both newer CBS homes and the older historic properties that fall under additional review.
West Palm Beach covers a wide stretch of territory, from the high-rise condos near Clematis Street to the older ranch homes further west past Military Trail. The neighborhoods around Flagler Drive and the Intracoastal have a different set of site challenges than inland properties, including salt air exposure and stricter setback requirements near the waterway. We work across all of these conditions and arrive prepared for what we will find on site.
We also regularly serve homeowners in nearby Lake Clarke Shores and in Palm Beach Gardens to the north. Whether your project is a screen room in a West Palm Beach subdivision or a custom sunroom on a larger lot nearby, we cover the full corridor.
We respond to all West Palm Beach inquiries within one business day. You can call or use the contact form, and we will schedule a time to visit your property at your convenience.
We visit your property, measure the space, check the existing structure, and note any site-specific factors like setback requirements or historic construction. You receive a written quote before anything is agreed to.
We handle the city building permit application and, if your neighborhood has an HOA, submit the architectural review package on your behalf. Permit review in West Palm Beach typically takes two to four weeks.
Once permits are approved, construction typically runs two to four weeks. We schedule and pass all required city inspections before considering the job complete. You do not need to be present for every inspection.
We serve all of West Palm Beach with permits, local knowledge, and no-pressure estimates.
(561) 359-1679West Palm Beach is Palm Beach County's county seat and its most populous city, home to roughly 117,000 residents. The city covers a wide range of neighborhoods and building types. The historic districts of Flamingo Park, El Cid, and Grandview Heights contain homes built as far back as the 1920s in Mediterranean Revival and Mission styles, many of them listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Further west, postwar concrete block construction from the 1950s through the 1970s makes up a large share of the single-family housing stock, with smaller lots and more modest finishes. For more about the city's layout and history, the West Palm Beach Wikipedia article gives a solid overview.
Downtown West Palm Beach has seen major reinvestment over the past two decades, with Rosemary Square serving as a central gathering spot and Clematis Street anchoring the entertainment corridor along the Intracoastal waterfront. The city also includes a high share of condominiums and townhomes built in the 1970s through 1990s, particularly near the waterfront, many of which are managed by HOA boards. Homeowners across all of these neighborhoods can benefit from properly designed sunrooms and enclosures built for coastal conditions. We also serve homeowners in nearby Greenacres and in Lake Worth Beach just to the south.
Keep insects out while enjoying fresh air in a screened outdoor room.
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Learn MoreWe serve all of West Palm Beach - call today or submit a request and we will be back to you within one business day.