WPB West Palm Beach Sunrooms builds four-season sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Royal Palm Beach homeowners, with every project permitted through the Village of Royal Palm Beach Building Department and constructed to Florida Building Code wind-load standards. We serve this western Palm Beach County community and know the planned subdivisions, concrete block homes, and HOA processes that define it.

Royal Palm Beach homeowners who have invested 15 or 20 years in their property tend to want a room they will actually use every day - not just when the weather cooperates. A properly insulated four-season sunroom with high-performance glass and a dedicated cooling solution stays comfortable in July just as well as January, turning what used to be a hot, underused patio into the room you spend the most time in.
Royal Palm Beach sits on flat terrain where yard flooding after heavy summer rain is a real issue, not just an inconvenience. When we design a patio enclosure here, drainage slope and the relationship between the floor level and the yard grade are part of the conversation from day one - not something we figure out after the concrete is poured. That planning is what keeps the floor dry after a South Florida downpour.
Most Royal Palm Beach homes were built in the 1980s and 1990s, and a lot of them have original patio covers or open slabs that have never been screened. Adding a screened enclosure extends the usable season by several months - the evenings here from November through April are genuinely pleasant - and it keeps the mosquito pressure of the wet season from making the backyard miserable from May through October.
Many Royal Palm Beach homes were built on lots with rear yards sized for outdoor living. A sunroom addition converts that open space into finished, climate-controlled square footage without requiring the homeowner to move - which matters in a village where median home values have climbed significantly over the past decade and moving up means paying a lot more for a similar house elsewhere.
Royal Palm Beach has a lot of homes with concrete slab patios that are good candidates for enclosure work - solid poured slabs from the 1980s and 1990s that are largely intact but have never had a structure built on them. A patio-to-sunroom conversion uses that existing footprint and builds an enclosed room on top of it, which is typically faster and less disruptive than starting fresh with a new foundation.
HOA communities in Royal Palm Beach often have specific requirements for exterior materials, colors, and roofline profiles before they will grant architectural review approval. We work through the design process with those requirements in mind from the first conversation - producing drawings that satisfy the HOA's standards before anything is submitted officially - so you are not revising plans or losing weeks to a rejection.
The majority of homes in Royal Palm Beach were built between the mid-1980s and the early 2000s, which puts a large share of the housing stock at 25 to 40 years old. At that age, original roofing, stucco exteriors, and concrete flatwork are typically showing real wear. Concrete block construction is the standard here, and stucco that has been cracking or absorbing moisture for years on a Florida exterior creates challenges when you attach a new structure to it. We check the condition of the exterior wall on every site visit before recommending how the new room connects to the home - because covering a moisture problem with a new structure only makes it worse.
Two factors shape almost every sunroom project in Royal Palm Beach in ways that differ from less-planned communities. First, Florida Building Code wind-load requirements are strict for good reason - this part of Palm Beach County sees the full force of tropical storm and hurricane activity, and any structure attached to your home has to be built to handle it. Second, HOA architectural review is a real step, not a formality. Many Royal Palm Beach subdivisions require written approval from an architectural review board before a village permit can be filed. Skipping that step or getting the order wrong stalls your project. We handle both the HOA submission and the permit application so those steps happen in the right sequence.
Our crew works throughout Royal Palm Beach regularly, and we pull permits through the Village of Royal Palm Beach Building Department - an incorporated village with its own permitting process, separate from Palm Beach County. We know the review timeline, the inspection sequence, and what the village's plan reviewers typically flag on sunroom and enclosure projects in this area.
Royal Palm Beach is laid out as a planned community with organized subdivisions branching off the main roads. Royal Palm Beach Commons Park is the central gathering point for local families, and neighborhoods within a mile or two of it include some of the most established housing stock in the village. Further out toward the Acreage and Loxahatchee, lots get larger and the character shifts - bigger footprints, more land between houses, and sunroom projects that are sometimes more complex because of larger patios and more elaborate screened pool enclosures.
We serve Wellington directly to the south, and both communities share the same western Palm Beach County character - planned subdivisions, flat terrain, and a high proportion of CBS homes from the same era. We also cover Jupiter to the north. If you are anywhere in this corridor, we respond within one business day.
We respond to all Royal Palm Beach inquiries within one business day. You will speak with someone who knows this village - not a call center - and we will schedule a site visit at a time that is convenient for you.
We visit your property to measure the space, assess the existing slab and drainage, check the exterior wall condition, and review HOA requirements if your neighborhood has them. Your written quote includes everything - no items added after you sign.
If your community requires architectural review, we prepare the submission documents and walk you through what the HOA needs. Once approval is confirmed, we file for the permit with the Village of Royal Palm Beach and notify you of the expected review timeline before construction begins.
Our crew handles all phases of the build once permits are in hand. The Village of Royal Palm Beach requires a final inspection before the permit closes - we schedule and attend it, and we walk you through the completed room before we consider the job finished.
We serve Royal Palm Beach homeowners with free on-site estimates and written quotes. Fill out the form or call us - we respond within one business day.
(561) 954-1833Royal Palm Beach is an incorporated village in the western part of Palm Beach County with a population of around 40,000. The community grew rapidly from the 1980s through the early 2000s, developing from a planned community concept into a fully built-out suburban village. Most of the housing stock is single-family concrete block construction on flat lots, with a mix of screened patios, pool enclosures, and rear yards that are well suited to sunroom and enclosure projects. Homeownership rates are high, and many residents have lived in their homes for 10 to 20 years or more. For more on the village's background, see the Wikipedia entry for Royal Palm Beach, Florida.
Royal Palm Beach Commons Park is the main community gathering space for local families, and neighborhoods throughout the village are organized around clear subdivision boundaries. The village borders Wellington to the south - both communities share similar housing stock, climate conditions, and HOA prevalence, which is why we frequently work across both in the same week. Royal Palm Beach is also a short drive from West Palm Beach, making it part of a connected service corridor we know well. The flat terrain throughout the village, combined with South Florida's heavy summer rain, means drainage is a practical concern on nearly every outdoor project we bid here.
Keep pests out and breezes in with a quality screen room installation.
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Learn MoreWe serve Royal Palm Beach and all of western Palm Beach County - call today or send us your project details and we will respond within one business day.