WPB West Palm Beach Sunrooms is a licensed sunroom contractor serving Delray Beach, FL, specializing in sunroom remodeling, patio enclosures, and screen room installation. We work throughout Delray Beach regularly and understand the permit process through Palm Beach County, the older concrete block housing stock common here, and the salt air conditions that affect every material choice.

A large share of Delray Beach homes were built between the 1950s and 1980s, and many of the screen enclosures and glass rooms added during that era no longer meet Florida's current hurricane standards. Our sunroom remodeling service brings these older structures up to current code while resolving leaks, overheating, and deteriorating frames that are common in Delray Beach's aging housing stock.
Delray Beach gets soaked every summer, with afternoon thunderstorms rolling through from May through October. Enclosing your patio gives you a protected outdoor living space that stays dry, bug-free, and usable even when the rain comes down hard just a few blocks from Atlantic Avenue.
Delray Beach is close enough to the Intracoastal Waterway and surrounding wetlands that mosquito and no-see-um pressure is heavy during the warm months. A properly installed screen enclosure lets you enjoy the breeze and evening air in communities like Lake Ida or Tropic Isle without fighting insects every time you step outside.
Many Delray Beach seasonal residents want a room they can use fully during the winter months without worrying about keeping it comfortable through the summer heat when they return. A four-season sunroom with proper insulation and climate control solves both - usable in December and in August.
Many Delray Beach homes, especially the concrete block ranch houses from the 1960s and 1970s, were built before outdoor living rooms were standard. Adding a sunroom creates meaningful new livable space that fits the South Florida lifestyle without a full home addition.
From smaller bungalows near Old School Square to larger homes in Kings Point, every property in Delray Beach is different. A custom sunroom is designed around your home's actual roofline, exterior finish, and foundation rather than a standard kit that may not fit the way your house is built.
Delray Beach sits in Palm Beach County's coastal zone, which means every attached structure on a residential property must meet Florida's current hurricane wind load requirements. Older enclosures and glass rooms built before the mid-1990s were built to a much lower standard, and many of them will not pass a current inspection. Homeowners who are buying, selling, or refinancing sometimes discover this for the first time when an inspector flags an unpermitted or non-compliant structure. Getting ahead of that issue - remodeling to current code before it becomes a problem - is one of the most common reasons homeowners in Delray Beach call us.
The combination of heat, humidity, and salt air also accelerates wear on older enclosures faster than most homeowners expect. Sandy, porous soil with a high water table means moisture can work up against slabs and footings over time, and flat lots with limited drainage make standing water after summer storms a regular occurrence. These are conditions that affect both the original structure and any new work we do, so material selection and proper drainage planning are part of every project we take on in Delray Beach.
Our crew works throughout Delray Beach regularly, and we pull permits through Palm Beach County's Building Division on every project. We know the local inspectors, how review timelines tend to run during the busy season, and what documentation is needed when an older structure needs to be brought up to current code before new work can be permitted.
Delray Beach has real diversity in its housing stock - smaller concrete block homes near the Atlantic Avenue corridor, larger single-family houses in neighborhoods like Lake Ida and Tropic Isle, condo buildings along the coast, and age-restricted communities like Kings Point on the west side. Each setting has its own permit and HOA considerations, and the proximity to the Atlantic means we always factor in salt air corrosion when selecting fasteners, frames, and hardware. We work throughout the city, from neighborhoods near Delray Beach Municipal Beach to communities west of Military Trail.
We also serve the cities directly north and south of Delray Beach. If you are in Boca Raton just to the south, or in Boynton Beach to the north, our team covers those areas with the same level of local knowledge we bring to every Delray Beach project.
We respond to every inquiry within one business day. In your first conversation, we will ask about your home, the existing structure if there is one, and whether your neighborhood has HOA requirements that need to be addressed before work begins.
We visit your property to review the existing space, assess the foundation and framing, and identify any code compliance issues with older structures. This assessment is free, and the written estimate we provide afterward covers all permit fees so there are no surprises on cost.
We handle the permit application with Palm Beach County on your behalf. Once approved - typically 2 to 4 weeks after submission - our crew schedules the job and completes the work according to the approved plans with minimal disruption to your home.
After construction, the project goes through a final county inspection before we close out the permit. We do a walkthrough with you to confirm everything meets your expectations and that you have documentation of the completed, permitted work for your records.
We serve all of Delray Beach, FL. Free estimates, permits handled for you, no pressure.
(561) 954-1833Delray Beach is a coastal city of roughly 70,000 people in southern Palm Beach County, situated between Boynton Beach to the north and Boca Raton to the south. The city is well known for Atlantic Avenue, its walkable main street lined with restaurants, galleries, and shops that runs from the beach westward through downtown. The surrounding residential neighborhoods include a mix of older concrete block homes from the postwar era, newer townhouses and condos, and large age-restricted communities like Kings Point on the western edge of the city.
Delray Beach has one of the older median ages in Palm Beach County, with a significant share of long-term residents and seasonal snowbirds. Many homes have been in the same family for decades, and older structures like screen enclosures and glass-in patios from the 1960s through the 1980s are common. The city's proximity to the Atlantic and the Intracoastal Waterway means salt air is a constant factor, and properties near the coast see faster wear on exterior materials than those further inland. Neighboring Boynton Beach to the north shares much of the same building stock and climate conditions, and we work regularly across both cities.
Keep pests out and breezes in with a quality screen room installation.
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