WPB West Palm Beach Sunrooms is a licensed sunroom contractor serving Boca Raton, FL, specializing in solarium installation, patio enclosures, and custom sunroom construction. We work with homeowners in gated communities and open neighborhoods across Boca Raton - handling HOA approvals, pulling city permits, and selecting materials built to hold up in South Florida's climate.

Boca Raton homeowners who want maximum natural light and a clean, architectural look often choose a solarium over a standard sunroom. Our solarium installation uses low-emissivity glass on the roof and walls, paired with proper ventilation and a dedicated cooling system, so the finished room is genuinely usable during Boca Raton's hot summer months rather than a space you avoid from June through September.
Most single-family homes in Boca Raton have an existing patio or lanai - often with a concrete slab already in place. Enclosing that space adds a protected, climate-influenced room without the cost of a full addition, and it dramatically expands how much of the year you can actually use the back of your home.
Boca Raton homes range from 1970s ranch houses with flat rooflines to newer West Boca construction with tile roofs and elevated entryways. A custom sunroom is designed to match your home's specific profile - not a catalog product that may look out of place on your property's architecture.
Screen enclosures around pools and lanais are a standard feature in Boca Raton's residential neighborhoods, and they take a beating from Florida's summer storms and year-round UV exposure. We install new enclosures and replace aging frames and screens using materials rated for coastal conditions.
Boca Raton residents who want an outdoor living room that functions as real interior living space benefit from a fully insulated, climate-controlled four-season sunroom. Properly built with low-e glass and a dedicated HVAC unit, these rooms stay comfortable even during the hottest stretch of South Florida summer.
Adding a sunroom to your Boca Raton home increases usable square footage and expands outdoor-indoor living space - both of which are strong selling points in a market where buyers expect homes to deliver on the South Florida lifestyle. Every addition we build is permitted, code-compliant, and properly documented.
Most of Boca Raton's housing stock was built between the 1970s and the 1990s, which means a large share of the city's homes are now 30 to 50 years old. At that age, older screen enclosures, patio rooms, and glass additions are frequently at the end of their lifespan - and many were built before Florida adopted its current hurricane construction standards. Any renovation or new addition must meet today's code, which requires impact-rated glass, engineered framing connections, and wind-load compliance for the coastal zone Boca Raton falls within.
Boca Raton also receives roughly 60 inches of rain per year, most of it falling as intense afternoon thunderstorms from May through October. Flat driveways and pool decks collect standing water, and older patio slabs shift and crack over time from the seasonal wet-dry cycle. Salt air blows inland from the Atlantic coast continuously, degrading metal frames, fasteners, and caulk faster than homeowners typically expect. Selecting the right materials - marine-grade aluminum, stainless hardware, and UV-stable glazing - is not an upgrade here; it is what a well-built project in Boca Raton requires from the start.
Our crew works throughout Boca Raton regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Boca Raton Building Division on every project. Boca Raton has its own municipal building department, separate from Palm Beach County, and the review process and inspector expectations here are specific to the city. We know the submission requirements, what plan reviewers flag on sunroom and solarium projects, and how to structure an application so it moves through review without unnecessary delays.
Gated communities are a significant part of the Boca Raton market. Neighborhoods like Boca West, Broken Sound, and communities near Glades Road often have their own architectural review boards with specific rules about exterior materials, colors, and contractor access. We handle HOA pre-approval coordination as a standard part of the project - not as an afterthought. Whether your home is near Mizner Park in downtown Boca Raton or in the newer construction west of Interstate 95, we know what to expect before we arrive.
We serve a broad stretch of South Florida's coast. If you are in Deerfield Beach to the south, or in Delray Beach just to the north, our team covers those markets with the same local knowledge we bring to every Boca Raton project.
We respond within one business day. We will ask about your home, the project you have in mind, and whether you are in a gated community - so we can flag HOA requirements early and avoid delays later in the process.
We visit your property at no charge, review the existing space and foundation, and provide a written estimate that includes all permit fees. We address cost questions fully at this stage so you know the complete project price before committing to anything.
We manage HOA board submissions and pull the building permit with the City of Boca Raton on your behalf. City review typically takes 3 to 5 weeks. We handle all communication with both the HOA and the building department so you do not have to track multiple approval processes.
Once permits are approved, our crew completes the build according to the city-approved plans. We schedule and pass the required city inspection, close out the permit, and do a final walkthrough with you to confirm the finished work meets your expectations.
We serve all of Boca Raton, FL. HOA coordination included, permits handled, free on-site estimates.
(561) 954-1833Boca Raton is a city of roughly 97,000 residents in southern Palm Beach County, situated between Delray Beach to the north and Deerfield Beach to the south. The city is known for its planned communities, high property values, and a strong culture of home investment. Iconic landmarks include Mizner Park, the city's open-air downtown district, and the historic Boca Raton Resort and Club on the Intracoastal Waterway. Florida Atlantic University's main campus sits along Glades Road and is one of the city's largest institutions.
The housing stock in Boca Raton varies significantly by neighborhood. The eastern side of the city, closer to the coast, has a mix of older condos and single-family homes built primarily in the 1970s and 1980s. The western areas - often called West Boca - feature newer construction, larger lots, tile roofs, and higher-end finishes. Gated communities are common throughout the city, and many of them have architectural review requirements that affect any exterior project. Neighboring Delray Beach to the north and Deerfield Beach to the south share similar coastal conditions, and we serve all three cities regularly.
Keep pests out and breezes in with a quality screen room installation.
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Learn MoreLicensed, permitted, and built for South Florida's climate. Call us to schedule your free on-site assessment in Boca Raton.