WPB West Palm Beach Sunrooms is a licensed sunroom contractor serving Lake Worth Beach, FL, building sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms on the older concrete block homes that fill this city. We know the housing stock here and we work with existing slabs and structures wherever possible to keep your project on budget and on schedule.

Lake Worth Beach is packed with modest single-story homes that have patio slabs sitting largely unused - too hot in summer, too buggy in the evening, and unprotected when the afternoon storms roll in. Our sunroom additions service converts that unused slab into a finished, livable room without requiring a major addition footprint - a practical upgrade for homes that are older and smaller but sit in an area where property values have climbed.
Lake Worth Beach sits on flat, low-lying land, and open patios here often collect water after the heavy summer rains that drop fast and leave standing water near foundations. Enclosing your patio raises it into a sheltered, dry space with a proper slope to move water away - something open slabs on flat lots rarely accomplish on their own.
Sitting right on the Atlantic, Lake Worth Beach has intense bug pressure from late spring through fall - especially in the evenings near the Intracoastal and the waterfront neighborhoods. A screened enclosure lets you use your outdoor space year-round without fighting mosquitoes or no-see-ums, using frames built to Florida's coastal wind standards.
Many Lake Worth Beach homeowners are watching their budgets carefully - the city has a more moderate home value range than nearby Boca Raton or Palm Beach, and every improvement dollar matters. Vinyl sunrooms offer solid durability in Florida's coastal humidity without the higher cost of custom aluminum or glass construction.
The concrete block ranch homes that dominate Lake Worth Beach almost always have an existing rear patio slab - and that slab is typically the right size and shape for a direct conversion to an enclosed sunroom. Working with the existing slab avoids excavation costs and keeps the project scope manageable on tight city lots.
Older Lake Worth Beach homes often have rear patios covered by an aluminum awning or flat-roof overhang that is already partially sheltered. Converting that existing structure into a fully enclosed patio room takes advantage of what is already there and reduces the amount of new framing required.
Lake Worth Beach is an Atlantic coast city with a public beach and pier, and salt air reaches homes well beyond the waterfront. Bare metal, standard fasteners, and untreated aluminum frames corrode significantly faster here than in communities a few miles inland. That is not a scare tactic - it is just the reality of working on coastal South Florida homes. We use powder-coated frames and marine-grade hardware on every Lake Worth Beach project because we know what the environment does to anything else over time.
The age of Lake Worth Beach's housing stock is the other major factor. A large share of homes here were built between the 1940s and 1970s - many are 50 to 80 years old. Before attaching any new structure to an older CBS home, we assess the slab, footings, and exterior stucco to understand what we are working with. Skipping that step and anchoring into aging concrete is how projects fail later. Lake Worth Beach also falls under city permitting rather than the county, so the permit process runs through the City of Lake Worth Beach building department - which has its own timeline and requirements separate from Palm Beach County.
Our crew works throughout Lake Worth Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Lake Worth Beach Building Department and are familiar with their process and review timelines - which differ from the Palm Beach County process used in many neighboring municipalities.
Lake Worth Beach is a compact city with a tight street grid and small lots, and we plan every site visit with access and staging in mind. Neighborhoods close to downtown along Lake Avenue tend to have older bungalows and cottages with wood-frame construction - a different situation than the CBS ranches that fill most of the city. We know how to work on both. The flat terrain throughout Lake Worth Beach means we always evaluate drainage around existing slabs before designing an enclosure, because the last thing you want is a new sunroom sitting in a low spot that pools water after every storm.
We also serve Greenacres just to the west, and West Palm Beach to the north. If you are in any of these areas, call us to schedule your free estimate - we respond within one business day.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form with a brief description of your space and what you want to build. We respond to all Lake Worth Beach inquiries within one business day.
We visit your property to measure the space and assess the existing slab, stucco, and drainage - especially important on older Lake Worth Beach homes. The estimate we give you is based on your actual conditions, not a phone-call guess. There is no cost for this visit.
We handle the permit application with the City of Lake Worth Beach Building Department before any work begins. Once approved - typically two to four weeks - our crew completes the installation. You do not need to be on-site during construction, but you will need to be available for the final inspection sign-off.
We walk through the completed room with you to confirm everything meets the plan and passes inspection. We also cover basic care and maintenance for your specific materials so you know how to protect your investment in Lake Worth Beach's coastal climate.
We serve all of Lake Worth Beach. Free estimates, no pressure - just an honest assessment of your space and a clear quote.
(561) 954-1833Lake Worth Beach is a small, densely developed city of roughly 40,000 people packed into about 8 square miles on the Atlantic coast of Palm Beach County, sitting just south of West Palm Beach. The city has a well-known downtown along Lake Avenue - lined with local restaurants, shops, and the historic Lake Worth Playhouse - and a public beach and pier on the ocean that residents use year-round. The housing stock is older by South Florida standards, with a large share of homes dating to the 1950s and 1960s. Concrete block construction with stucco exteriors is the norm, and the city has a diverse, dense character that sets it apart from newer planned communities nearby.
The Intracoastal Waterway runs along the western edge of the barrier island that Lake Worth Beach occupies, and the flat, low-lying terrain throughout the city means drainage and moisture management are constant considerations for homeowners. Neighborhoods closest to the downtown core include older wood-frame bungalows and cottages - some dating to the 1920s and 1930s - that require more care than the CBS ranches filling the rest of the city. Neighboring Boynton Beach to the south and Palm Springs to the west share some of the same building stock and climate conditions.
Keep pests out and breezes in with a quality screen room installation.
Learn MoreTurn your underused deck into a beautiful, functional sunroom space.
Learn MoreWe serve the whole city - from the neighborhoods near the pier to the quieter streets closer to the county line. Call today and we will schedule your on-site visit within the week.