Loxahatchee Groves Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is a sunroom contractor serving Delray Beach, FL, building vinyl sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for the coastal CBS homes, mid-century neighborhoods, and planned communities that make up this city. We have been building for Palm Beach County homeowners since 2018 and pull every Delray Beach permit through the city's Development Services department on every project we complete here.

Salt air off the Atlantic reaches well inland across Delray Beach, and it corrodes untreated aluminum frames and steel fasteners faster than most homeowners expect. Vinyl framing is the practical choice for this coastal city - no rust, no repainting, and it holds its shape in the heat and humidity. Learn more about our vinyl sunroom service to see how we spec these rooms for South Florida's climate, from frame selection to sealed perimeter details.
Delray Beach's wet season brings near-daily afternoon thunderstorms from May through October, and the mosquito pressure near the Intracoastal and the city's canals is real. A screen room built with aluminum rated for Palm Beach County wind loads keeps bugs and rain off your patio while letting the ocean breeze through - and it costs far less than a fully enclosed addition.
Many Delray Beach homes - especially the mid-century CBS houses near downtown and in Pineapple Grove - were built with concrete slabs that have never been covered. Enclosing that slab turns what is currently a sun-scorched or rain-soaked concrete pad into a room you can actually furnish and use, with proper drainage details to handle Florida's summer downpours.
Delray Beach has a substantial retiree and year-round homeowner population that wants a comfortable room for daily use - not just fair-weather days. A fully conditioned four season sunroom with insulated walls, impact-rated glass, and dedicated HVAC stays livable through the hottest and most humid parts of the South Florida year, fully permitted through the city.
Whether your Delray Beach home is a 1960s CBS ranch near Federal Highway or a newer two-story in a gated community west of I-95, a sunroom addition adds real usable square footage without the disruption of an interior renovation. It attaches cleanly to the existing structure, with proper flashing and sealed connections so the room does not become a moisture problem years down the road.
In Delray Beach, where winters are mild and outdoor living is genuinely pleasant from November through April, a three season sunroom gives you a comfortable, bug-free space for most of the year at a lower cost than a fully conditioned room. The key is proper ventilation and the right glazing for the coastal environment - not the heavy insulation specs designed for cold climates up north.
Delray Beach has homes built across more than six decades, and the conditions they face depend heavily on which part of the city they sit in. Older neighborhoods near downtown and along Federal Highway have mid-century concrete block homes that have spent fifty or sixty years absorbing South Florida sun, humidity, and the occasional hurricane. These homes often have existing concrete slabs or screened areas that are long overdue for an upgrade, and a contractor working on them needs to understand how aging CBS construction behaves - where the walls are solid, where the moisture has worked in, and how to attach a new addition without compromising the original structure. Newer communities west of I-95 and in the mid-city area have different profiles: planned subdivisions with HOA rules governing materials, colors, and placement, where a sunroom project requires both a city permit and an HOA approval before work begins.
The other defining factor in Delray Beach is the Atlantic coastline. The beach runs along the city's eastern edge, and the Intracoastal Waterway cuts through the city separating the mainland from the barrier island. Salt air reaches well inland from both, and it degrades paint, caulk, aluminum frames, and metal fasteners faster than most homeowners from other parts of the country expect. A sunroom built without marine-appropriate materials and sealed connections will show corrosion and water intrusion within a few years in this environment. Combine that with Palm Beach County's hurricane wind-load requirements and the city's FEMA flood zone requirements for properties near the water, and the case for a contractor who genuinely knows Delray Beach becomes clear.
Our crew works throughout Delray Beach regularly, and we submit every permit through the City of Delray Beach Development Services department at 100 NW First Avenue. Pulling permits through the city rather than the county process is the standard for any work inside city limits, and we know the plan reviewers and inspection timeline well enough to keep projects moving without unnecessary delays.
Driving through Delray Beach, the difference between the older neighborhoods near Atlantic Avenue and the western communities past I-95 is immediately apparent. Near downtown and in Pineapple Grove, you find smaller lots with older CBS homes that often have rear slabs or screened areas in need of updating. Further west, the communities are newer and larger - townhomes, villas, and single-family homes in HOA-managed developments where material choices and setbacks may be governed by community rules as well as city code. On the barrier island along A1A, properties are higher-value and face the most direct coastal exposure of anywhere in the city. We work in all three zones and know how the job requirements shift between them.
To the north, Boynton Beach is our nearest neighbor in this part of the county, and we serve both communities regularly - the building conditions and permit processes are different but we handle both. We also serve Loxahatchee Groves to the northwest, our home base, where we have been building since 2018.
Reach us by phone or through our contact form. We reply within 1 business day to schedule your site visit - you will not be left waiting for a callback.
We come to your Delray Beach property, evaluate the existing slab, check your flood zone and HOA status if applicable, and measure the space. You receive a written estimate with line-item pricing so cost is fully addressed before any contract is signed.
We file the permit application with the City of Delray Beach and manage the review timeline. Once approved, our crew handles all framing, roofing, glazing, and finish work. You do not need to be on-site for most construction days.
The city inspector signs off on the completed work, and we do a walkthrough with you to confirm the room looks and functions as agreed. You receive your permit documentation - valuable for insurance purposes and for your home's resale history.
We serve all of Delray Beach - from the older neighborhoods near Atlantic Avenue to the communities west of I-95 and the waterfront properties along A1A. Call us or submit your project and we will get back to you within 1 business day.
(561) 363-0429Delray Beach is a coastal city of about 65,000 to 70,000 people in Palm Beach County, sitting roughly 52 miles north of Miami between Boca Raton to the south and Boynton Beach to the north. The city is known for East Atlantic Avenue, the downtown commercial strip lined with restaurants, shops, and nightlife that draws visitors and residents year-round. Just north of downtown, the Pineapple Grove Arts District is a walkable neighborhood with older homes and small businesses named after the area's pineapple-farming history. The Intracoastal Waterway runs through the city from north to south, separating the mainland from the barrier island where A1A and the Delray Beach Municipal Beach are located. Properties on the island and along the Intracoastal tend to be higher-value and face the most direct salt-air and coastal exposure of anywhere in the city.
The housing stock in Delray Beach spans more than six decades. Older neighborhoods near downtown and along Federal Highway have concrete block homes from the 1950s through 1970s - some of them well maintained, others showing their age and ready for updates. Newer communities west of I-95 and in the mid-city area include planned subdivisions, gated communities, and condo complexes built from the 1980s through the 2000s, many with HOA governance that affects what materials and placements are permitted on exterior additions. The city's flat terrain and sandy soil mean that any ground-level work - foundation prep, drainage grading - needs to account for a shallow water table and soils that do not provide a firm base without proper preparation. Neighboring Boynton Beach to the north has similar building conditions, and we work regularly in both cities across this stretch of Palm Beach County's coastline.
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Learn MoreWe serve all of Delray Beach, FL - from the barrier island to the communities west of I-95. Call (561) 363-0429 or submit your project online.