Wellington Lanai Sunrooms & Patios serves Greenacres, FL, building enclosed patio rooms, screen enclosures, and full sunroom additions for homeowners across this mid-Palm Beach County city. We are fully licensed and insured for all Palm Beach County permit work and have been building in this corridor for years - including homes in the dense residential neighborhoods that sit on both sides of State Road 7.

Many Greenacres homes from the 1980s and 1990s have a covered rear slab that is fully open to the elements. Enclosing it converts that underused square footage into a comfortable living space, especially on smaller lots where every foot counts. Learn more about enclosed patio rooms.
Screen rooms are a cost-effective entry point for Greenacres homeowners who want to use their back porch through the spring and fall without being eaten alive by mosquitoes. The warm South Florida winters make screened spaces genuinely comfortable for at least half the year.
Greenacres gets heavy afternoon thunderstorms from June through September, and an open patio is simply not usable during that stretch. A proper patio enclosure keeps the rain out while preserving the airflow and natural light that make the space worth using in the first place.
For Greenacres homeowners on 6,000 to 9,000 square foot lots, adding a sunroom is one of the best ways to gain livable square footage without giving up yard space. We size and position additions to work within Palm Beach County setback requirements on tighter urban lots.
A four season sunroom with a dedicated mini-split or central AC connection is the only version that stays comfortable in Greenacres from June through October, when heat and humidity make any unconditioned room impractical. Low-E glass handles the UV load so the space does not overheat even in direct afternoon sun.
Greenacres homeowners who want low upkeep after the build often choose vinyl framing. Unlike aluminum, vinyl does not corrode in South Florida humidity, and it holds paint color without needing the regular recoating that older aluminum screen rooms require after years of exposure.
Most homes in Greenacres were built between the 1970s and 1990s, which puts a lot of the housing stock at 30 to 50 years old. That is the age when original concrete slabs start showing cracks, aluminum screen enclosures are corroding at the frame joints, and the sealants on stucco exteriors need replacement. When homeowners in this city decide to enclose a patio or add a sunroom, they are often working with an existing slab that needs evaluation before any new structure goes on top of it. A contractor who simply frames over a compromised slab without assessing the concrete condition is setting up a failure within a few years.
Greenacres also sits on very flat terrain just a few feet above sea level. The South Florida Water Management District manages drainage through a canal network across the area, but individual lots still experience pooling and slow drainage after the heavy summer rains that drop significant rain in short periods. On smaller lots where houses and structures sit close together, poor grading around a new addition can redirect water onto a neighbor's property - something the county building inspectors pay attention to. Every project we do here includes a drainage assessment so the finished structure handles water the right way rather than creating a new problem.
Our crew works throughout Greenacres regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and enclosure work here. We submit all permits through the Palm Beach County Building Division, and for Greenacres properties in HOA communities, we help prepare the documentation needed for architectural review before we file for the building permit - running both processes in parallel saves weeks.
Greenacres runs along the State Road 7 (US-441) corridor, one of the busiest roads in Palm Beach County, with residential neighborhoods spread out on both sides. The city is flanked by Lake Worth Beach to the east, Lantana to the south, and West Palm Beach to the north. Homes here range from quiet single-family streets tucked behind the commercial strip to townhome communities with shared outdoor areas. Whether you are near Greenacres City Park or in a neighborhood on the western edge of the city, we know the area.
We serve neighboring communities throughout this part of Palm Beach County as well. Palm Springs is directly adjacent to Greenacres, and we work there often using the same permit and installation process. We also cover Lake Worth Beach to the east, so if you have family or neighbors in those areas, we serve them too.
Call or submit the online estimate form and we will follow up within one business day. Tell us what you have in mind - enclosing a slab, adding a screen room, or a full sunroom build - and we will set up a site visit.
We come to your Greenacres home, evaluate the existing slab and drainage, take measurements, and put together a written estimate. This is where you get real numbers - not a ballpark range from a phone call. No obligation to proceed.
We file with Palm Beach County and track the review process. Approval typically takes three to five weeks. You do not need to manage this - we notify you when permits clear and confirm the construction start date.
Most enclosures install in one to two weeks on site. We schedule the county final inspection, walk the completed project with you, and hand over all permit documentation so your home records are current.
We serve Greenacres and neighboring Palm Beach County communities. Reach out today and we will respond within one business day.
(561) 576-0264Greenacres is a city of roughly 42,000 people in Palm Beach County, sitting just west of Lake Worth Beach and south of West Palm Beach. The city grew rapidly during South Florida's suburban expansion from the 1970s through the 1990s, and most of the housing stock dates from that era. Homes here are predominantly concrete block construction with stucco exteriors, on lots that run from about 6,000 to 9,000 square feet - typical for the dense residential pattern along this part of the county. About 60 percent of housing units are owner-occupied, and the city has a stable, established residential character. The mix of single-family homes and townhome communities means the neighborhood feel changes from block to block, with some areas managed by active homeowners associations.
The city runs along State Road 7 (US-441), a major north-south commercial corridor that connects the area to the rest of Palm Beach County. Greenacres borders Lake Worth Beach to the east and Palm Springs to the north, and the nearby Palm Beach State College Lake Worth campus is a well-known anchor for the surrounding community. The activity in Greenacres is renovation and repair rather than new construction - the city has been largely built out for decades, and homeowners here are investing in improving what they have.
Keep insects out while enjoying fresh air in a screened outdoor room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio slab into a fully enclosed sunroom.
Learn MoreTurn your deck into a comfortable enclosed room you can use year-round.
Learn MoreClimate-controlled rooms designed for comfortable use every day of the year.
Learn MoreEnclose your patio with walls and windows for a protected outdoor room.
Learn MoreFloor-to-ceiling glass solariums that maximize natural light in your home.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and weather protection outdoors.
Learn MoreCall today or fill out the estimate form - we will respond within one business day with no pressure and no obligation.