Wellington Lanai Sunrooms & Patios serves West Palm Beach, FL, building four season sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for homeowners across the city - from the historic neighborhoods of Flamingo Park and El Cid to the concrete block homes further west. We are licensed for City of West Palm Beach permit work and respond to all inquiries within one business day.

West Palm Beach summers are hot and humid, but that does not mean your outdoor living has to stop. A four season sunroom with impact-rated glass and an air conditioning connection gives you a comfortable room for every month of the year, including July and August. Learn more about four season sunrooms.
Many West Palm Beach homes have an existing rear patio slab that sits unused most of the year because of heat, bugs, and afternoon storms. A patio enclosure turns that concrete into a sheltered space you can actually use - without the cost or complexity of a full room addition.
From October through May, West Palm Beach has some of the best outdoor weather in the country - and a screened enclosure makes every bit of it usable. Proper aluminum framing with marine-grade finishes resists the salt air common to neighborhoods near the Intracoastal Waterway.
West Palm Beach homeowners looking to add genuine square footage to a 1950s or 1960s concrete block home benefit from a sunroom addition that uses the home's existing CBS construction as the anchor wall. The addition can add a bright, livable room without disrupting the original architecture.
For West Palm Beach homeowners who want a room that is insulated, climate-controlled, and fully weatherproofed - but do not need the premium glass specification of a full solarium - an all season room hits the right balance of comfort and cost for Florida conditions.
Older West Palm Beach properties often have a solid concrete patio that is underused because it has no shade or weather protection. Converting that existing slab into an enclosed, climate-controlled sunroom adds functional living space without the cost of building a new foundation.
West Palm Beach is the largest city in Palm Beach County and has one of the most varied housing stocks in the region. Historic neighborhoods like Flamingo Park and El Cid contain homes built between the 1920s and 1940s in Mediterranean Revival and Mission styles - structures with clay tile roofs, stucco exteriors, and original wood windows. A sunroom addition on a home like this requires an approach that respects the existing construction and, in most cases, passes Historic Preservation Board review before a building permit is even issued. The postwar concrete block neighborhoods built in the 1950s through 1970s are a different challenge: those homes are solid, but the original slabs and stucco have been through 50 to 70 years of South Florida heat cycles, and a proper assessment before enclosing anything is not optional.
Proximity to water is the other factor that shapes sunroom work throughout West Palm Beach. The city runs along the Intracoastal Waterway, and the Atlantic Ocean is just a few miles east across Palm Beach Island. Salt air accelerates corrosion in aluminum frames, degrades caulk faster than inland conditions, and demands impact-resistant glass that meets Florida Building Code wind-load requirements for coastal zones. Contractors who do not account for coastal exposure at the material selection stage produce enclosures that start showing corrosion and seal failures within a few years. The right materials cost more upfront but hold up through multiple hurricane seasons without constant maintenance.
Our crew works throughout West Palm Beach regularly, and we pull permits directly through the City of West Palm Beach Building Division - a separate process from Palm Beach County that has its own submittal requirements, plan review queue, and inspection schedule. Knowing that process matters because a contractor who submits incorrectly can add weeks to a project before a single piece of framing goes up.
The city is large and its neighborhoods are genuinely different from one another. Homes near Clematis Street and the downtown corridor tend to be older and denser, with smaller rear yards and sometimes HOA or historic overlay requirements. The areas further west - beyond Military Trail toward the city limits - have larger lots, newer construction, and fewer overlay restrictions. We work in both parts of the city and understand how the permit and site conditions differ between them.
We also regularly serve the neighboring communities of Palm Beach Gardens to the north and Lake Worth Beach to the south, so we understand how sunroom work and local permitting conditions vary across this stretch of Palm Beach County.
Call or submit the contact form and we will respond within one business day. We schedule on-site visits for West Palm Beach homes throughout the week, including evenings for homeowners who cannot meet during daytime hours.
We visit the property, assess the existing slab or foundation, review setback distances and any historic overlay requirements, and give you a written estimate with no pressure. There is no charge for the assessment.
We prepare and submit all permit documents to the City of West Palm Beach Building Division - including structural drawings and historic board submissions where required. City review typically runs three to five weeks, and we handle all follow-up communications.
Once permits are approved, installation typically takes one to three weeks depending on the project scope. We schedule and pass all required city inspections, and the project is not closed out until the final inspection is complete and the permit is officially closed.
We serve all of West Palm Beach - historic neighborhoods, coastal homes, and everything in between. No pressure, no obligation. Just a straight answer on what the project involves and what it costs.
(561) 576-0264West Palm Beach is the largest city in Palm Beach County, with a population of about 117,000 residents. The city spans a wide range of neighborhoods and housing types - from the historic districts of Flamingo Park and El Cid, listed on the National Register of Historic Places and filled with 1920s and 1930s Mediterranean Revival homes, to the postwar concrete block neighborhoods built in the 1950s and 1960s, to newer condos and townhomes near the downtown core along the City of West Palm Beach waterfront. The Intracoastal Waterway runs along the city's eastern edge, and the Atlantic Ocean is just a few miles further east across Palm Beach Island.
The city has been growing steadily, with downtown revitalization drawing new residents to neighborhoods like Northwood Village and the SoSo district south of Southern Boulevard. This mix of older historic stock and newer urban construction means contractors working here need to be comfortable with both worlds. Neighbors to the south - Lake Worth Beach - and to the north - Palm Beach Gardens - have their own distinct building stock and local permit processes, and we serve homeowners in all three communities.
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 MoreWhether your home is historic, coastal, or somewhere in between - call us or submit the form today and we will get back to you within one business day.