Loxahatchee Groves Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is a sunroom contractor serving Palm Springs, FL, with screen rooms, patio enclosures, and four season sunrooms built on the older concrete block homes this village is known for. We have served Palm Beach County homeowners since 2018 and handle every permit and inspection so you do not have to.

Palm Springs homes sit just a few miles from the Atlantic coast, and the combination of heat, humidity, and biting insects makes unprotected patios hard to use most of the year. If your slab is sitting empty, learn more about our screen room installation service - we build aluminum-framed enclosures on existing slabs and handle all Palm Beach County permits from start to finish.
Many Palm Springs properties have a covered slab or small patio attached to the back of the house that never gets used because of the summer heat and bugs. A patio enclosure turns that space into a protected, usable area without the full cost of a room addition, and we build them to meet the wind-load requirements that apply in this part of Palm Beach County.
For Palm Springs homeowners who want a room they can use in July just as comfortably as in January, a fully conditioned four season sunroom is the answer. We install insulated walls, impact-rated glass, and climate control designed for South Florida's solar load, so the room stays comfortable even during the hottest part of the day.
Palm Springs was mostly built out in the 1950s through 1970s, and many homeowners in this village are ready to add space without moving. A sunroom addition attaches a bright, livable room to the back of your concrete block home and adds genuinely usable square footage - fully permitted through Palm Beach County.
Older Palm Springs homes often have a covered patio or lanai that was built open and has never been enclosed. Converting that structure into a properly enclosed patio room is one of the most practical upgrades for this housing stock - we work with the existing roof where possible and match stucco and materials to the original construction.
Some Palm Springs homes already have a screen room or older enclosure that has been sitting in disrepair for years - fogged glass, corroded aluminum frames, or a roof that leaks every summer storm. We remodel and upgrade existing structures to bring them up to current Florida building code so you can actually use the space again.
Palm Springs was chartered in 1957 and built out quickly through the 1960s and 1970s. That means most of the single-family homes in the village are 50 to 70 years old - concrete block and stucco construction that has been weathering South Florida summers for decades. Adding a screen room or sunroom to a home like this requires a contractor who knows how to anchor aluminum framing and structural additions to CBS walls correctly, and who understands that older slabs in this era of construction may have settled, cracked, or sloped in ways that need to be addressed before any framing goes up.
Palm Springs also sits on low-lying terrain with sandy soils and a high water table, typical of central Palm Beach County. The village is close enough to the Atlantic coast that salt air accelerates corrosion on metal components, and the flat terrain means drainage must be carefully managed around any new slab or foundation. Add Palm Beach County's high-wind zone requirements - which govern every window, door, and structural connection on an outdoor enclosure - and the picture becomes clear: this is work that demands someone who has done it here before, not a contractor learning the local code on your job.
Our crew works throughout the Village of Palm Springs regularly, and we pull permits through the Palm Beach County Building Division for projects here. The older CBS homes we work on most often in Palm Springs are built differently from the newer planned communities a few miles west - the slabs tend to be thinner, the original concrete is sometimes spalled or cracked after decades of heat and humidity cycles, and the roof overhangs are often minimal, which affects how a screen room or addition ties in. We account for all of that before we write an estimate.
Palm Springs is a compact village where most residents know their neighbors and their streets well. Congress Avenue is the main commercial corridor running through the heart of the village, and Military Trail runs along the western edge. The residential streets feeding off these corridors are generally older and narrower, and a lot of the lots are modest in size - which affects how we stage materials and access the rear of a property. Near John I. Leonard High School and throughout the neighborhoods behind Congress Avenue, we encounter the same housing stock repeatedly - and that familiarity means fewer surprises on your project.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Lake Worth Beach and Greenacres, both adjacent to Palm Springs and part of the same central Palm Beach County service territory we cover on a regular basis.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and describe what you have in mind. We respond within one business day and will schedule a time to visit your Palm Springs property - no commitment needed for the first visit.
We measure the space, evaluate the existing slab condition, and discuss materials, glass options, and any drainage considerations specific to your lot. You receive a written estimate before any further decisions - pricing for Palm Springs projects is influenced by the age of your existing slab and the scope of any prep work needed.
We file the permit with Palm Beach County and manage the review timeline. Once approved, the build begins - typically one to four weeks of active construction for most Palm Springs screen rooms and enclosures. You do not need to be present for most of the work.
We schedule the required Palm Beach County inspection before the project is considered complete. We then walk you through the finished room, confirm how ventilation and any climate systems operate, and check the drainage grade around the slab before we leave.
We serve Palm Springs homeowners throughout the village. Call us or send a message and we will respond within one business day.
(561) 363-0429The Village of Palm Springs is an incorporated municipality in Palm Beach County with roughly 28,000 residents packed into a compact footprint. It sits centrally within the county, bordered by West Palm Beach to the north and Lake Worth Beach to the south. The village was chartered in 1957 and grew quickly through the 1960s and 1970s, which means the dominant housing stock is single-family concrete block homes that are now 50 to 70 years old. Mixed in with these older homes are townhomes, condominiums, and apartment complexes, giving the village a residential density higher than many of its Palm Beach County neighbors.
The village has a strong multigenerational character - many families have lived here for decades, and long-term homeowners are common throughout its residential streets. Congress Avenue serves as the main commercial spine, lined with shopping centers and service businesses that residents use daily. The village is part of Palm Beach County's Urban Redevelopment Area, and renovation and improvement activity is common alongside the existing older housing stock. For homeowners in Palm Springs, investing in an outdoor living space - whether a screen room or a fully conditioned sunroom - is one of the most practical improvements you can make to a home that was built before outdoor-indoor living became a standard design expectation. Neighbors in West Palm Beach to the north and Greenacres to the west share similar housing stock and the same demand for quality enclosed outdoor space.
Keep bugs out and breezes in with a professionally installed screen room.
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Learn MoreWe serve the entire Village of Palm Springs and respond to every inquiry within one business day.