
Prism Parkland Lanai Sunrooms and Patios builds permitted, impact-rated sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen room installations in Coral Springs - with a team that knows Broward County building codes and has served northwest Broward County homeowners since 2015.

Coral Springs is a large city with a mix of housing ages and styles - from 1970s ranch homes to newer construction near the Sawgrass Expressway - and we tailor full sunroom construction to fit each property. Every build includes impact-rated glazing, proper slab drainage for South Florida's flat terrain, and permit management through the City of Coral Springs.
Coral Springs gets daily afternoon thunderstorms from late spring through early fall, turning open patios into unusable space for much of the year. A patio enclosure puts weathertight walls and a roof around your existing slab - no new footprint required - so the storms that used to drive you inside become something you can watch from a dry, comfortable seat.
With a large share of Coral Springs homes now 30 to 50 years old, many owners are upgrading from aging screened enclosures to fully insulated, climate-controlled four season sunrooms. A four season build handles the city's summer heat - routinely above 90 degrees with high humidity - and stays comfortable every month of the year.
Coral Springs sits far enough inland that its evenings can be pleasant - but not pleasant enough to ignore the mosquitoes and no-see-ums that peak year-round in South Florida. A screened enclosure gives back those outdoor hours, particularly the cooler mornings and evenings that make this area attractive to families.
Many Coral Springs homes have older enclosures built before today's wind-load requirements took full effect. Remodeling an aging sunroom or screen room into a properly rated, energy-efficient space brings it up to current code standards and eliminates the leaks, fogged glass, and drafts that older builds develop over time.
Coral Springs homeowners who want low long-term maintenance often choose vinyl-framed sunrooms. In this area's humid, salt-tinged air, vinyl frames resist corrosion and moisture intrusion better than some alternatives, reducing the upkeep required to keep the room looking and sealing correctly over years of South Florida weather.
Coral Springs was built almost entirely between the late 1960s and the mid-1990s as a master-planned city, and that history creates a specific demand pattern. A large share of the roughly 130,000-person city's housing stock is now 30 to 55 years old - which means a generation of screened enclosures, patio covers, and older sunrooms is reaching the end of its useful life at roughly the same time. The concrete block construction standard throughout South Florida means that attaching a new enclosure or addition requires tools and anchoring methods suited to CBS walls, not the wood-frame assumptions that work elsewhere.
The city's flat terrain - originally Everglades wetland - creates drainage conditions that matter enormously for any ground-level build. Coral Springs relies on a network of canals to manage stormwater, and the high water table means water moves slowly after the daily summer thunderstorms. A slab or enclosure installed without proper grading will collect standing water against the foundation, which accelerates damage in South Florida's year-round heat and humidity. Broward County's hurricane wind-load requirements layer on top of all of this - any permanent enclosed structure must be engineered for high-wind events, which is a baseline expectation here, not an optional upgrade.
Our crew works throughout Coral Springs regularly and is familiar with the city's permit office and the plan review expectations that come with building in a Broward County municipality. Coral Springs is one of the larger cities in the county, and the permit department processes a high volume of residential work - knowing what reviewers look for in wind-load compliance drawings helps us submit plans that move through the process without unnecessary back-and-forth.
The city is defined by its residential neighborhoods, most of them accessible from University Drive and Sample Road - the two main corridors that run north-south and east-west through the city. The Sawgrass Expressway borders the city on its north and west edges and is how we typically access Coral Springs from Parkland and the surrounding area. The city's well-known covered bridge - Florida's only - near the original 1963 planned community center, and the Coral Springs Sportsplex, are landmarks that orient where neighborhoods sit relative to each other.
We also serve homeowners in nearby communities that share similar conditions and building stock. Just to the north, homeowners in Parkland call on us regularly for the same kind of work. To the south, Coconut Creek is another Broward County community where we pull permits and handle enclosure and sunroom builds under the same code environment.
Call or use the contact form. We respond within 1 business day and schedule a free on-site visit at a time that works for you. No sales pressure during the visit - it is purely to understand the project.
We measure the space, check the existing slab or patio, and walk through your options. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we discuss the approval process at this stage so you know what to expect. You receive a written quote with a clear breakdown of materials, labor, and the expected permit timeline - no guesswork on cost.
We handle the HOA submission if needed, then submit the permit application to the City of Coral Springs. Once approvals are in hand, construction begins. Most of the disruption is outside your home and limited to the specific area where the enclosure or sunroom will go.
The building department inspects the work during and after construction. After the final inspection passes, we walk you through the finished space, hand over permit documentation, and go over any maintenance steps. The permit record stays with your home and matters if you ever sell or file an insurance claim.
We cover Coral Springs and surrounding Broward County communities. No obligation, no pressure - just a clear written quote after a free on-site visit. We respond within 1 business day.
(754) 320-5727Coral Springs is one of Broward County's larger cities, with a population of well over 130,000 people and roughly 24 square miles of primarily residential land in the northwest corner of the county. The city was chartered in 1963 and developed almost entirely from scratch as a planned community, with most neighborhoods built out between the late 1960s and the mid-1990s. That history is reflected in the housing stock: single-family homes on modest suburban lots, most built in a Florida ranch or Mediterranean-influenced style with concrete block construction and attached garages. University Drive and Sample Road are the main corridors that connect residents across the city. Florida's only covered bridge - a local landmark built in 1964 to mark the original planned community - still stands near the city's older neighborhoods. For a detailed look at the city's background, the Coral Springs Wikipedia article covers its development and landmarks in depth.
Because so much of Coral Springs was built in the same two or three decades, a large cohort of homes is now at the age when exterior additions, enclosures, and patio structures need attention. The city's flat terrain and high water table - remnants of its Everglades origins - mean outdoor construction here requires the same drainage awareness we bring to every project across Broward County. Homeowners in neighboring Parkland to the north face the same conditions, as do homeowners in Coconut Creek to the south, and we serve all three communities with the same standards.
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