
Stop losing your patio to South Florida heat and storms. We convert existing patios into fully enclosed, air-conditioned rooms you can actually use every day of the year.

Patio-to-sunroom conversion in Parkland, FL takes your existing concrete slab and builds a fully enclosed, climate-controlled room on top of it - walls, windows, a roof, and cooling - with most projects running from a few weeks of construction to a three-to-five month total timeline including permits and HOA review. The result is a room that works in July just as well as in January, not a seasonal space you abandon for most of the year. If you are also exploring a deck-to-sunroom conversion or want a fully enclosed space that connects to your backyard on a budget, our enclosed patio rooms page covers additional options worth reviewing.
Most Parkland homeowners who reach out to us share a common frustration: they paid for a patio or screened lanai, but between the heat, the bugs, and the afternoon downpours, they only use it a handful of months each year. Converting it into a true sunroom solves that completely. You keep the footprint you already own, the slab you already have, and the backyard view you chose your home for - and you get a room that is actually comfortable when the temperature climbs into the 90s.
If you step outside from May through October and immediately retreat indoors, your patio is not delivering the outdoor-connected living you wanted. Parkland summers push into the low-to-mid 90s with persistent humidity - a climate-controlled conversion gives you that space back for the eight or nine months it is currently unusable.
A screen lanai keeps some bugs out but does nothing to block heat or humidity. If your existing screen enclosure is also showing its age - torn screens, a leaking roof panel, or frames past their prime - converting it to a proper sunroom is a natural upgrade rather than a repeated repair job that keeps coming back.
If your family has outgrown the interior of your home but a full room addition feels like too much disruption, converting an existing patio is a practical middle path. You already have the slab and the footprint - the conversion builds a real room on what is already there without tearing into the heart of your home.
Many Parkland homes back up to water, preserves, or private pools - and a sunroom lets you live with that view every day rather than just on the occasional comfortable evening. Whether it is morning coffee, an afternoon office, or evening entertaining, you get a room where that view is front and center.
Every patio-to-sunroom conversion starts with an honest assessment of your existing slab. If the concrete is sound, it becomes the sunroom floor - saving real cost over pouring new. From there, we frame the walls, install the roof system, and set the windows and doors. In South Florida, all glazing is impact-rated as required by Broward County code, and every roof connection is flashed and sealed for the region's rainy season. Homeowners who want a fully climate-controlled room year-round can connect the sunroom to their existing HVAC or add a dedicated mini-split. For those considering a full structural build from scratch rather than a conversion, our deck-to-sunroom conversion service and standalone enclosed patio rooms options offer additional paths depending on your starting point.
We handle the permit application with the City of Parkland and manage required inspections throughout the build. If your neighborhood has a homeowners association, we assist with the HOA architectural review submission - a step that catches many homeowners off guard and can delay a project by weeks if not started early. You get a clean permit record at the end, which matters when you sell your home or file an insurance claim.
Homeowners who want a completely climate-controlled room usable every month of the year, with insulated walls and dedicated cooling.
Those who want a comfortable, weatherproof room for the milder months at a lower investment than a full four-season build.
Homeowners whose outdoor space is a raised deck rather than a slab patio, needing structural assessment before enclosure.
Buyers who want a weatherproof outdoor room with flexible glazing options rather than a fully insulated addition.
Parkland sits in Broward County in South Florida, where summer temperatures regularly climb into the low-to-mid 90s and humidity stays high from roughly May through October. A sunroom built here must be designed first and foremost to stay cool - insulated glass that limits solar heat gain, proper ventilation, and a dedicated cooling source are not optional upgrades in this climate, they are baseline requirements. Broward County is also in a high-wind zone, so all glazing and framing must meet Florida wind-resistance standards. Homeowners in neighboring Pompano Beach and Coral Springs face the same code requirements, and we build to those standards across the entire service area.
Parkland is also a planned community with a high concentration of homeowner associations, and many of them require architectural review before any exterior addition can be built. That process runs separately from the city building permit and on its own timeline - sometimes handled by an architectural review committee that meets only monthly. Beyond HOA considerations, Parkland sits on flat, low-lying land with a high water table. Your contractor needs to evaluate drainage around the existing slab carefully, because water that moves harmlessly across an open patio can become a persistent problem at the base of an enclosed room if not addressed during the build.
We visit your home, evaluate the existing slab condition, measure the space, and talk through how you want to use the room. You get a written estimate that covers scope and timeline - no vague ballparks. We respond within 1 business day of your inquiry.
Once design is agreed, we prepare the HOA architectural review submission if your neighborhood requires it and file the building permit with the City of Parkland. Permit review adds several weeks before work begins - we build that into your schedule from day one so nothing catches you off guard.
Before walls go up, we confirm the slab is level, properly drained, and structurally sound for the conversion. Any needed prep happens first. Then the crew frames the walls, installs the roof system, and sets the windows and doors - daily work in your backyard that stays in one zone.
Cooling connections, electrical, flooring, and trim complete the room. City inspectors confirm the work at required stages. We do a final walkthrough with you, go over any new systems, and hand over your closed permit documentation before calling the job done.
Free on-site estimate. No pressure. We handle the permit and HOA paperwork.
(754) 320-5727Florida requires contractors performing sunroom conversions to hold a state-issued license covering structural, roofing, and mechanical work - not just a screen enclosure registration. You can verify license status through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation before signing anything. We work within that licensed scope on every project.
We submit the building permit application, coordinate city inspections at each required stage, and hand you the closed permit documentation at the end. Homeowners who skip permits face complications at resale and potential insurance gaps - we make sure that risk does not apply to your project.
Parkland's planned communities - including gated neighborhoods like Heron Bay and Parkland Isles - commonly require architectural review before exterior additions are approved. We are familiar with the local HOA submission process and prepare the materials your association needs, reducing the chance of revisions that delay your start date.
Every conversion we build uses impact-rated glazing as required by Broward County code, and every roof-to-wall connection is flashed and sealed to handle South Florida's rainy season. The National Sunroom Association sets industry standards for these details - work that does not meet those standards tends to show water intrusion by the first rainy season.
These are not selling points - they are the baseline for a patio conversion that holds up through South Florida weather and protects your home. When you call, you get straight answers about what your specific slab can become and what the honest timeline looks like.
Convert a raised deck structure into a fully enclosed sunroom, including structural assessment of the existing framing before enclosure work begins.
Learn MoreWeatherproof patio enclosures with flexible glazing options for homeowners who want outdoor protection without a fully insulated room addition.
Learn MorePermit timelines in Broward County mean the sooner you start, the sooner you are in a cool, finished room - call or request a free estimate today.