
Your patio sits empty most of the year because of the heat. We turn it into a fully enclosed, air-conditioned room you can actually use - properly permitted and built for South Florida weather.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Wellington turns your existing concrete slab or screened enclosure into a fully enclosed, climate-controlled room attached to your home - most jobs take two to five weeks of active construction once permits are in hand.
If you have a screened porch or bare concrete slab that sits unused from May through October, a conversion is one of the most practical improvements you can make to your Wellington home. Instead of avoiding that part of your property for half the year, you gain a room with real walls, proper insulation, and air conditioning.
Many homeowners start by comparing a patio conversion to a deck-to-sunroom conversion - the process is similar, but a patio slab requires a different structural assessment than a raised deck frame. Either way, the goal is the same: a room you can use every day of the year, not just in December.
If you avoid your patio from May through October because of heat, humidity, or bugs, the space is not working for you. Wellington's climate makes an unenclosed outdoor area genuinely uncomfortable for roughly half the year. A properly built sunroom solves that problem completely.
Torn screens, bent aluminum framing, or a roof that leaks when it rains are signs your enclosure is costing you money. In many cases, the repair budget is better spent on a full conversion that gives you a real room. This is common in Wellington neighborhoods built in the late 1980s and 1990s.
If you regularly wish for a quiet sitting room, home office, or playroom, a patio conversion is one of the most cost-effective ways to add that space. You are not building from scratch - you are finishing square footage that already exists in footprint.
If last hurricane season left your screen enclosure bent or leaking, that is a natural moment to ask whether a sturdier enclosed room makes more sense. A sunroom built to current wind-resistance standards in Palm Beach County is significantly more resilient than a standard screen enclosure.
We handle every part of the conversion - from the initial slab assessment through framing, windows, insulation, HVAC connection, and final inspections. If you want a three-season room with glass panels and a ceiling fan, we build that. If you want a fully conditioned four-season room tied into your home's central air, we build that too. We also do enclosed patio rooms for homeowners who want a more open feel with different glazing options.
Every project includes the permit application, HOA submission support where needed, and a written estimate before any work begins. We do not subcontract the structural work - the same crew that frames your room also installs the glass and connects the HVAC. If your project also involves a rethink of the layout or finishes, our deck-to-sunroom conversion process follows the same careful assessment and permitting sequence.
Suits homeowners with an existing concrete slab or screened porch who want a fully enclosed, air-conditioned room year-round.
Suits homeowners who want to keep costs lower and primarily use the space during cooler months with natural ventilation.
Suits homeowners who want full heating and cooling integration so the room is comfortable every single day of the year.
Suits homeowners with an existing aluminum screen enclosure who want to replace screens with glass panels and add insulation.
Wellington's summer heat index regularly pushes past 100 degrees, and the afternoon thunderstorm pattern from June through September means an unenclosed patio is genuinely uncomfortable for most of the year. That is not a slight inconvenience - it is roughly five months of unused space. A properly insulated and air-conditioned sunroom fixes that completely. Wellington was also largely built out between the 1980s and early 2000s, which means a large share of homes already have concrete slabs or aging aluminum screen enclosures that are prime candidates for conversion rather than repair.
Local permit and HOA processes matter here too. Palm Beach County's building department handles permit review for Wellington, and most of the planned communities in the area - Versailles, Olympia, Palm Beach Polo, and others - require HOA architectural review before county permits are even submitted. We work with homeowners across Royal Palm Beach and Lake Worth Beach as well, and the permit and HOA workflow is similar throughout western Palm Beach County. Getting that sequence right from the start is the difference between a smooth project and a three-week delay.
We ask a few basic questions: the size of your existing patio, whether it is a bare slab or screen enclosure, and what you hope to use the room for. We will give you a realistic budget range before the site visit - no surprises.
We visit your home to measure the space, assess the existing slab, and check HVAC access. Within one to two weeks you receive a written estimate that breaks down the major cost categories - not just a single number.
If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help prepare the submission package and manage the review process. Once approved, we apply for the Palm Beach County building permit. This stage typically takes two to four weeks.
Once the permit is posted, framing, windows, insulation, and HVAC connection happen in sequence. County inspections are scheduled by us. After the final walkthrough, you receive copies of all permit and inspection records.
Free estimate - no pressure, no obligation. We reply within one business day.
(561) 576-0264Every patio-to-sunroom conversion we do in Wellington is fully permitted through Palm Beach County. A permit means a county inspector reviews the work at key stages, which protects your investment and your resale value.
We know the architectural review processes in Wellington communities like Versailles, Olympia, and Palm Beach Polo. We prepare your HOA submission package so it comes back approved, not kicked back for revisions.
Village of WellingtonWellington is in a wind-borne debris region, so every sunroom we build uses glass and connections rated to withstand serious storm conditions. This is not an upgrade - it is the baseline for every project we complete here.
You receive an itemized written estimate before we pull a permit or swing a hammer. If the slab assessment turns up anything that changes the scope, we tell you upfront - no surprises buried in the fine print.
Every one of these points is something we can speak to specifically for your Wellington neighborhood - not just in general terms. If you want to verify our license, ask about our permit history in Palm Beach County, or talk through the HOA process for your community, call us and we will answer every question directly.
More information on building permits: Palm Beach County Building Division | Hurricane-rated glazing standards: Florida Building Commission | HOA requirements: Village of Wellington
Convert an existing deck into a fully enclosed, weather-protected room with proper drainage planning for Wellington's flat terrain.
Learn MoreExplore enclosed patio room options with different glazing levels to match your budget and how you plan to use the space.
Learn MoreWe are booking projects now - reach out today to lock in your start date before the busy season fills our schedule.