Your deck sits empty from May through October. We turn it into a climate-controlled, fully enclosed room - built to withstand South Florida heat, rain, and storm season, and properly permitted from day one.

Deck-to-sunroom conversion in Loxahatchee Groves transforms your existing outdoor deck into a fully enclosed, livable room by assessing the deck structure, reinforcing or rebuilding the base as needed, and then framing walls, installing windows, and tying in a proper roof - most projects run two to four months from permit submission to handover.
If you have a deck that goes unused for most of the year because of heat, bugs, or afternoon storms, the structure underneath it may already be doing half the work for you. A deck-to-sunroom conversion in Loxahatchee Groves evaluates what is worth keeping, reinforces what needs it, and builds a finished room on top - so you get a real, daily-use space without starting from a bare lot.
If you have a concrete slab rather than a wood deck, our patio-to-sunroom conversion service covers that scenario specifically. Both paths end up in the same place - a permitted, climate-controlled room - but the structural starting point is different and affects how the project is scoped.
In Loxahatchee Groves, an exposed deck becomes an outdoor oven by late spring. The combination of direct sun, high humidity, and daily afternoon storms makes most open decks genuinely uncomfortable for the majority of the year. If you are getting real use out of it for only four or five months, you are paying for a structure that works against you more than half the time.
South Florida's humidity and UV exposure break down wood decking faster than in drier climates. If you have soft spots, faded boards, loose railings, or sections that flex underfoot, you are already facing a repair-or-replace decision. Converting to a sunroom at the same time resolves those structural issues and upgrades the space rather than just restoring a surface that will need attention again in a few years.
Near the canals and agricultural land in western Palm Beach County, mosquitoes and no-see-ums make outdoor entertaining on an open deck almost impossible after dusk. A fully enclosed sunroom - sealed against insects with proper glazing and tight door seals - gives you back those evening hours without having to plan around the bug pressure that is a real part of life in this area.
If your family needs a home office with natural light, a playroom that keeps kids visible and cool, or a casual dining area that still feels connected to the yard, a deck conversion is often the most efficient path. The deck footprint is already there - you are not building from a bare lot, which holds down both cost and disruption compared to a full room addition from scratch.
We manage deck-to-sunroom conversions as a complete project - starting with a thorough structural assessment of your existing deck and ending with a passing final inspection. That means evaluating the footings and framing, recommending whether to reinforce or rebuild, designing the wall and roof system for South Florida conditions, specifying wind-rated glazing, pulling all permits, and overseeing every construction phase. If you want the finished room tied into your home's HVAC, we handle that. If a dedicated mini-split unit makes more sense for your layout, we size and install that instead. For homeowners who want even more interior finish - flooring, painted walls, trim work - our all season rooms service covers fully finished year-round additions as a complete package.
We work only with window and wall systems rated for Palm Beach County's wind-load requirements - not generic residential products that are not engineered for South Florida's storm exposure. Every project is permitted and inspected. We carry full liability insurance throughout construction, and we give you a realistic timeline upfront that includes the permitting phase so you can plan accordingly. Construction work happens primarily at the back of the house, so daily life inside stays largely uninterrupted.
We inspect deck footings and framing before any walls go up - reinforcing or replacing sections that are not strong enough to carry the new structure.
Adds screened or panel walls and a weathertight roof for bug and rain protection without full climate control - suitable for use in the cooler months.
Insulated walls, sealed high-performance windows, and climate control - the right choice for homeowners who want the room usable in July as well as January.
Maximizes natural light and outdoor views with floor-to-ceiling glazing and heat-rejecting glass - a good fit for decks with strong yard or landscape views.
Flooring, painted walls, electrical outlets, and interior trim so the converted space feels like a proper room - not just an enclosed deck.
A dedicated cooling unit for decks where tying into the existing central system is not practical - keeps the room comfortable without overloading the home's AC.
Loxahatchee Groves is a semi-rural community in western Palm Beach County where large lots, canals, and flat terrain with a high water table shape how outdoor structures are built and maintained. Humidity and intense UV exposure in this climate break down wood deck framing faster than in drier regions - which means many decks here look fine from the surface but have underlying framing issues that need to be addressed before any enclosure goes up. We assess every deck thoroughly before recommending a path forward, because the quality of a finished sunroom depends entirely on the integrity of what it sits on.
South Florida's wet season - daily afternoon thunderstorms from June through October - also means any structure being built needs to be waterproofed and sealed from day one, not retrofitted later. We plan every project with rain delays in mind and use temporary weatherproofing during open phases of construction. We serve homeowners across the western Palm Beach County area, including Wellington and Royal Palm Beach, and we understand both the local building requirements and the site-specific conditions that affect how decks are built and how sunroom conversions need to be approached in this part of Florida.
We visit your property, inspect the deck structure - footings, framing, surface condition - and talk through your goals. You get a clear scope and written estimate. We reply to every inquiry within one business day.
Once you sign a contract, we prepare engineering drawings and submit the permit application to Palm Beach County. Review typically takes several weeks - we manage the process so you do not have to track it yourself.
After permit approval and materials arrive, crews address any deck reinforcement first, then frame walls, install windows, and tie in the roof. We use temporary weatherproofing during open phases to protect your home from South Florida's afternoon storms.
A county inspector confirms the finished structure meets the permitted plans. We do a final walkthrough together - any punch-list items are addressed before we close the job and hand over the permit documentation.
We assess your deck structure, handle the permits, and build to Palm Beach County's wind and moisture standards. Free estimate - reply within one business day.
(561) 363-0429We inspect every deck structure thoroughly before recommending a scope of work. If the existing framing can support the new enclosure with minor reinforcement, we say so and price it accordingly. If significant structural work is needed, we tell you that upfront - not after the walls are up. There are no budget surprises mid-project.
We prepare and submit all permit documents, manage inspection scheduling, and hand you the closed permit at the end of the job. You can verify our Florida state contractor license through the Florida DBPR before you sign anything. A properly closed permit protects your home's value and prevents complications at resale.
South Florida's afternoon thunderstorms are a daily reality during construction season. We sequence work to minimize how long your home is exposed during open phases and use temporary weatherproofing when needed. We are also members of the National Sunroom Association, which means the standards we build to are specific to this type of construction - not just general contractor practices.
Palm Beach County sits in a hurricane-prone wind-borne debris region, and every window and wall connection we install is rated for the wind speeds this area actually sees. This is not an upgrade option - it is the baseline for every deck-to-sunroom conversion we build. It is also what allows the work to pass inspection the first time.
Every deck-to-sunroom conversion we complete leaves the homeowner with a fully documented, permitted addition on their property record. That matters at resale, at insurance renewal, and whenever a future buyer or lender asks about the room - and it is something we build into every project as a matter of course.
A fully finished year-round room addition - ideal when you want flooring, painted walls, interior trim, and climate control all included in a single project.
Learn MoreIf your existing space is a concrete slab rather than a wood deck, this conversion approach uses the slab as the floor - often saving time and foundation work.
Learn MoreGet a free estimate before the next rainy season starts - so your new room is permitted, built, and ready when you need it most.