
Prism Parkland Lanai Sunrooms and Patios brings sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen room installations to Parkland homeowners - every project is impact-rated, permitted, and backed by a team that has served Broward County since 2015.

Most Parkland homes were built in the 1990s and 2000s with concrete block construction and generous backyard lots - ideal candidates for a fully enclosed sunroom addition that adds real, climate-controlled square footage. We build to Broward County wind-load standards using impact-rated glazing, so your investment holds up through storm season.
Parkland summers push into the low-to-mid 90s with relentless humidity, and only a fully insulated, air-conditioned room will stay comfortable from May through October. A four season sunroom solves this directly, giving you a light-filled space connected to your yard without the heat forcing you back inside.
Parkland's afternoon thunderstorm season runs from roughly June through September, making an open patio genuinely difficult to use for months at a time. A patio enclosure puts solid walls and a weathertight roof around your existing slab, turning a seasonal space into one you can use through even the heaviest summer storms.
Parkland's year-round mosquito pressure is one of the most common reasons homeowners reach out to us. A screened enclosure keeps insects out while letting the breeze through, giving back the outdoor hours that bugs and no-see-ums have taken from you - especially in the evenings and early mornings.
Many Parkland homes sit in HOA communities with architectural review requirements that govern exterior additions. We work with homeowners to design custom sunrooms that meet those HOA standards from the start - the right dimensions, materials, and roofline compatibility to get approval without costly revisions.
Parkland's intense UV exposure fades outdoor furniture and makes shaded patio time a practical necessity, not a luxury. A solid patio cover gives you a shaded, dry outdoor zone that extends your comfortable outdoor hours even during the peak of summer - without requiring full enclosure permits.
Parkland sits in the northwest corner of Broward County with the Everglades forming its western edge. The flat, low-lying terrain means that after a hard summer rain, water moves slowly and high-water tables push moisture up around slabs and foundations. Any sunroom or enclosure built here needs proper grading and a drainage plan that accounts for how water actually moves across South Florida lots - not generic construction assumptions from other parts of the country. The sandy soils over limestone bedrock common in this part of the county also affect how concrete slabs and post footings perform over time.
The city's housing stock adds another layer of local knowledge that matters. Most Parkland homes were built inside master-planned communities between the 1990s and 2000s using concrete block construction with tile roofs and generous lot sizes. After 20 to 30 years, the exterior surfaces, slabs, and screened enclosures on those homes are reaching the age when they need real attention or replacement. Broward County also enforces strict wind-resistance requirements for any permanent addition, which means impact-rated glazing is not a premium upgrade here - it is the code baseline. A contractor who does not build to those standards regularly will slow you down or create problems you discover after the job is done.
Our crew works throughout Parkland regularly, pulling permits from the city and navigating the architectural review processes common in neighborhoods like Heron Bay and Parkland Isles. We know the City of Parkland building department's review process and what the inspectors look for on wind-load compliance for enclosed structures in this area. That familiarity shortens the time between your signed contract and the day work actually starts.
Parkland is defined by its low-density character, its proximity to the Everglades, and the wide, tree-lined streets of its planned communities. University Drive and Holmberg Road are the main routes we travel to reach neighborhoods across the city, and the Sawgrass Expressway connects us quickly when we are moving between Parkland and surrounding communities. The city has kept commercial development deliberately limited, which means residential projects dominate our work here - single-family homes with concrete driveways, tile roofs, and HOA-regulated yards.
We also serve homeowners across the broader area. Nearby Coral Springs shares Parkland's Broward County permit environment and similar housing stock, and we handle projects there regularly. Homeowners in Coconut Creek just to the south also call on us when they need enclosure or sunroom work done to the same standards we apply in Parkland.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form. We respond within 1 business day and schedule a time to visit your home. There is no cost and no obligation for the initial visit.
We measure the space, assess your existing slab or foundation, and talk through your HOA situation if applicable. You will receive a detailed written quote that breaks down materials, labor, and the permit timeline - so you know exactly what you are committing to before you sign anything.
We handle the HOA submission if your neighborhood requires it, then submit the permit application to the City of Parkland. Once approvals are in hand, construction begins. Most of the work happens outside your home, and your daily routine inside is rarely disrupted.
The building department inspects the work at key stages and at completion. After the final inspection passes, we walk you through the finished space, hand over the permit documentation, and explain any maintenance steps. Your permit record stays with your home.
We serve Parkland and surrounding Broward County communities. Free estimate, no pressure. Call or submit your details and we will be in touch within 1 business day.
(754) 320-5727Parkland is a city of about 35,000 people in the northwest corner of Broward County, bordered by the Everglades to the west and Coral Springs to the south. It developed almost entirely through master-planned communities built from the early 1990s onward - neighborhoods like Heron Bay and Parkland Isles are the best-known examples, characterized by gated entrances, community amenities, and homes on quarter-acre or larger lots. The city has enforced strict zoning rules that limit commercial development, which gives it a park-like, low-density feel compared to neighboring municipalities. Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School sits near the center of the city and is one of the community's most recognized landmarks. You can learn more about the city and its development history through Wikipedia's Parkland, Florida article.
Because most of the housing stock dates from the 1990s and 2000s, a large share of homes are now 20 to 30 years old - at the age when driveways, exterior surfaces, screened enclosures, and patio structures need real attention. The flat terrain and high water table inherited from the area's Everglades origins mean that outdoor work here must account for drainage in a way that is less critical in other parts of the country. All of our builds in Parkland reflect those conditions. Nearby Coral Springs to the south and Coconut Creek share similar building stock and climate conditions, and we serve homeowners across all three communities.
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