
Your open patio is losing you usable space every summer. We enclose it into a comfortable, weathertight room that works in every season - without the disruption of a full interior addition.

Enclosed patio rooms in Parkland, FL transform an existing open or screened patio into a fully weathertight room with a solid roof, framed walls, and glass or window panels - most construction phases run one to two weeks once permits are approved, with the total project timeline typically spanning six to twelve weeks. The room ties directly into your home's existing structure, using your current slab as the floor and connecting to your roofline so the addition looks like it was always part of the house. If you are deciding between a full enclosure and a more open option like a patio enclosure or a more feature-rich build like a solarium installation, we can help you compare the options at the free estimate visit.
Parkland homeowners consistently tell us their open patios sit empty from May through October because the heat, bugs, and afternoon thunderstorms make them impossible to use. Enclosing that space changes the equation entirely. You keep the natural light and the garden view - but the weather, the mosquitoes, and the humidity stay on the other side of the glass where they belong.
In Parkland, the combination of intense heat, daily rain from June through September, and persistent mosquitoes makes an open patio genuinely uncomfortable for most of the year. If you are only getting a few pleasant months out of a space that takes up a significant footprint of your property, enclosing it recovers that investment and turns it into somewhere useful.
If your family has grown, you are working from home, or you want a dedicated space for relaxing or entertaining, an enclosed patio room adds usable square footage at a fraction of the cost of tearing into your home's interior. It uses your existing slab and typically ties into your current roofline, which keeps the project scope and timeline manageable.
Many Parkland homes already have a basic screened lanai, but screens alone do nothing to block heat, heavy rain, or the worst of the insects. If your existing lanai feels unusable during peak summer or lets in too much heat and glare, upgrading to a fully enclosed room with glass panels and a solid roof addresses all of those problems at once.
Buyers in Broward County consistently value indoor-outdoor living spaces, and a well-built, permitted enclosed patio room signals that the home has been thoughtfully improved. It photographs well, shows well during tours, and documents cleanly at closing - unlike an unpermitted structure that raises flags during inspection.
Not every enclosed patio room is built the same way, and the right configuration depends on how you want to use the space, whether you plan to cool it, and what your existing patio and roofline allow. Some homeowners want a simple, budget-conscious enclosure with a solid roof and fixed glass panels - a clean step up from a screened lanai. Others want a room with dedicated air conditioning, operable windows, and finishes that match the interior of the house. We also work with homeowners who want to step further and install a solarium with glass overhead for a fully light-filled space, or to use the project as an upgrade from a basic patio enclosure to a fully weathertight room.
Every enclosure we build in Broward County uses framing and glazing that carries Florida product approval for the wind-load requirements in the local high-wind zone. We manage the permit application, prepare HOA architectural review submissions where required, and coordinate all inspections. When the final inspection passes, you have clean permit documentation on file - the kind that matters when you sell your home or file an insurance claim after a storm.
Homeowners who want a weathertight, bug-free room at the most manageable cost, using their existing slab and roofline.
Those who want a room with dedicated cooling, operable windows, and interior finishes that match the rest of the home.
Owners who want maximum natural light overhead and a greenhouse-like aesthetic with glass walls and roof.
Homeowners upgrading an existing screened lanai to full glass enclosure, where the structure is suitable for the added load.
Parkland is a planned community built primarily in the 1990s and 2000s, which means many of its homes are now 20 to 30 years old - and the open patios and basic screened lanais that came with those homes often no longer meet the way families live or the weather demands the area has made clear over the years. South Florida is one of the most demanding building environments in the country for enclosed structures. Broward County sits in a high-wind zone, so every enclosed room must use framing and glass that meets Florida's strict wind-resistance and product approval standards. Homeowners in communities like Lauderhill and Margate face the same requirements, and we build to those standards across all of our service area.
Parkland's flat terrain and high water table also affect how an enclosed patio room must be designed. South Florida's heavy summer rainy season - near-daily afternoon thunderstorms from June through September - means the roof must shed water quickly and the drainage system must move water away from your home's foundation. Poor drainage at the connection point between the new enclosure and your existing home is one of the most common causes of water intrusion and long-term structural damage in South Florida. Getting this right from the start is not a detail - it is the difference between a room that holds up and one that leaks at the first rainy season.
We visit your home, assess your existing patio, measure the space, and talk through what you want the room to do - from a simple bug-free enclosure to a fully air-conditioned room. You get a written proposal with a detailed scope, materials, and cost. We respond to every inquiry within 1 business day.
We help prepare your HOA architectural review package if your community requires it - this happens before the permit is filed. Once you have written HOA approval in hand, we submit the permit application along with required engineering drawings. Plan review adds several weeks to the pre-construction schedule.
Once permits are approved, custom-fabricated framing and glass panels are ordered. Construction typically runs a few days to two weeks on site. Workers are in your backyard daily during this phase, but your home's interior stays largely untouched. We ask you to clear the patio area before the crew arrives.
The building department sends an inspector to verify the work meets code - a required step for any permitted addition. After the inspection passes, we walk you through the finished room, check every window and door, confirm drainage is working, and hand you your warrant and permit documentation.
Free in-home estimate. We handle the permits, HOA submissions, and every step from design to final inspection - no pressure, no obligation.
(754) 320-5727Any contractor doing structural enclosure work in Florida must hold a valid state-issued license. You can confirm ours is current and in good standing through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation before you sign anything. Hiring a licensed contractor means the state holds them accountable for the quality of the work.
We handle every permit application and manage every required inspection with the City of Parkland building department. A contractor who asks the homeowner to pull the permit is a red flag - it is typically a sign they are not properly licensed or are trying to avoid accountability for the work. When we build it, it is permitted, inspected, and documented.
We build to the standards published by the National Sunroom Association, the leading trade body for enclosed room builders. These standards address structural performance, glazing quality, weathertightness, and energy efficiency - and they go beyond the minimum required by local code.
Parkland has one of the highest concentrations of HOA-governed communities in Broward County, and most of those communities require architectural review approval before a permit is filed. We have navigated this process across the area and know how to prepare a submission that does not come back for corrections - keeping your project on schedule from the start.
These are not marketing points - they are the standards we hold ourselves to on every project in Parkland and across the surrounding area. When the final inspection clears and the permit is closed out, you have a room that is safe, legal, and genuinely valuable to your home.
A fully glass-walled and glass-roofed structure for homeowners who want maximum natural light and a greenhouse-like feel in their outdoor room.
Learn MoreA step up from a screened lanai - solid framing and panels that protect your patio from weather and insects without fully enclosing the space.
Learn MoreOur schedule fills quickly - reach out today for your free estimate and lock in your project date before the next rainy season starts.