
Prism Parkland Lanai Sunrooms and Patios builds patio-to-sunroom conversions, enclosed patio rooms, and screen room installations for Pompano Beach homeowners - every project is impact-rated for coastal wind loads and fully permitted through the City of Pompano Beach. We have served Broward County homeowners since 2015 and respond to new inquiries within 1 business day.

Many Pompano Beach homes built in the 1950s through 1980s have open concrete slab patios that are unusable for half the year due to heat, rain, and insects. A patio-to-sunroom conversion works with your existing slab, adding impact-rated walls and a weathertight roof to create a fully usable room - without digging a new foundation.
Salt air and coastal breezes make Pompano Beach evenings genuinely pleasant, but mosquitoes and no-see-ums end outdoor time fast. A screened enclosure lets you enjoy the ocean air year-round while keeping insects and wind-blown debris out. We use corrosion-resistant aluminum framing suited to coastal Broward County conditions.
Pompano Beach sits directly on the Atlantic and sees the full force of summer thunderstorms and tropical systems. A fully enclosed patio with impact-rated glass and a solid roof structure gives your family a protected outdoor-connected space that stands up to anything the hurricane season brings.
Homes along the Intracoastal Waterway and canal neighborhoods of Pompano Beach often have yard layouts that can support a new sunroom addition extending off the back of the house. We design additions that account for coastal setback requirements and the salt-air environment, using materials rated for the conditions your home actually faces.
Pompano Beach's intense year-round sun makes shading a practical necessity for any outdoor area. A solid patio cover blocks UV and reduces heat on your slab and outdoor furniture, extending the comfortable outdoor hours without the cost of a full enclosure. We anchor covers to meet Broward County wind-load requirements.
Canal-front and waterfront properties in Pompano Beach deal with constant moisture and salt exposure that shortens the life of any outdoor structure not built for the environment. Enclosed patio rooms with sealed frames and impact-rated glazing give you a livable, finished space that handles the waterfront conditions better than an open porch ever could.
Pompano Beach is a coastal Atlantic city, and that position shapes everything about how outdoor structures need to be built here. Homes within a mile or two of the ocean or the Intracoastal Waterway deal with salt-laden air that corrodes metal fasteners, frames, and finishes faster than it would just a few miles inland. The sandy, low-lying soil common in coastal Broward County also has a naturally high water table, which affects how slabs and footings perform over time. Any contractor who builds here without understanding the coastal material requirements and drainage realities is creating maintenance problems that show up within a few years.
The city also sits in one of the highest hurricane-risk corridors in the United States. Broward County is in a high-wind zone, and the Florida Building Code requires impact-rated glazing for all enclosed structures built here. That is not an upgrade you can skip - it is the baseline that every properly permitted project must meet. Pompano Beach's housing stock is largely concrete block construction from the 1950s through 1980s, which means many homes are 40 to 70 years old and have patios, screen enclosures, or outdoor areas that have reached the end of their useful life and need to be replaced, not just patched.
Our crew works throughout Pompano Beach regularly, pulling permits through the City of Pompano Beach building department and handling the inspection process for enclosed structure permits in this coastal zone. We are familiar with what the city's inspectors require for impact-rated wall systems and roof-to-structure connections in a high-wind jurisdiction - details that matter significantly more here than they do in inland Broward cities.
Interstate 95 and Atlantic Boulevard are the main routes we travel when working in Pompano Beach, and we cover the full east-west spread of the city from the beach neighborhoods near State Road A1A and the Hillsboro Lighthouse area west to the quieter residential streets near I-95. Canal-front properties and Intracoastal-adjacent homes make up a significant portion of our Pompano Beach work, and we understand the access and material considerations that come with those sites.
We also work across the broader area. Homeowners in Deerfield Beach just to the north face similar coastal conditions and call on us for the same impact-rated enclosure work. We serve homeowners in Boca Raton to the north as well, bringing the same coastal-grade construction standards to every project we take on along this stretch of the Gold Coast.
Call or submit our contact form and we will be back to you within 1 business day to schedule a free visit to your home. There is no charge and no obligation for the initial consultation.
We visit your property, measure the existing slab or build area, and assess your site conditions - including any coastal setback or drainage factors specific to your location in Pompano Beach. You receive a detailed written quote that covers materials, labor, and the permit timeline before you commit to anything.
We submit the permit application to the City of Pompano Beach and manage the review process. Once the permit is approved, construction begins. Most enclosed patio and conversion projects in Pompano Beach wrap up the physical construction phase within a few weeks.
The city's building inspector reviews the completed work. After the final inspection passes, we walk you through the finished room, hand you the permit documentation, and explain any ongoing maintenance for the coastal environment. Your permit record stays with the property.
We serve homeowners across all of Pompano Beach - from the beach corridor to the canal neighborhoods near I-95. No pressure, no obligation.
(754) 320-5727Pompano Beach sits in northeastern Broward County along the Atlantic Ocean, roughly 36 miles north of Miami and just north of Fort Lauderdale. With around 112,000 residents, it is one of the larger cities in Broward County, covering approximately 25 square miles. Most of the city's single-family residential neighborhoods were built out between the 1950s and 1980s, when farmland was converted to housing developments and working families moved here in large numbers. The result is a wide mix of housing stock - older concrete block ranch homes in the western and central neighborhoods, newer waterfront construction along the canals and the Intracoastal, and a growing number of redeveloped properties near the beach and downtown area. The Pompano Beach pier and the Hillsboro Inlet are the city's best-known landmarks.
The city has a broad range of neighborhoods and property types, from modest working-class blocks near State Road 7 to waterfront estates on the Intracoastal. Canal-front properties are common throughout the eastern half of the city, and a large share of homeowners deal with the ongoing maintenance demands that come with coastal exposure. Atlantic Boulevard is the main east-west corridor connecting the beach to the city's inland areas, and it runs through both residential and commercial zones that represent the full range of Pompano Beach property types. Homeowners here also frequently ask about work in neighboring Deerfield Beach to the north, and in Boca Raton further up the coast, both of which we serve regularly.
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Learn MoreCall us today or submit a request online - we respond within 1 business day and serve all of Pompano Beach, from the beach corridor to the canal neighborhoods near I-95.