
A screened porch is unusable for months in South Florida. A four season sunroom - fully insulated, air-conditioned, and built to hurricane-rated standards - gives you a real room you can enjoy every day of the year.

Four season sunrooms in Coral Springs are fully enclosed room additions with insulated walls, a sealed roof, and climate control - built to be comfortable even during the hottest, most humid months of the year, with most projects running eight to fourteen weeks from first conversation to finished, permitted room.
In most of the country, "four season" means staying warm in winter. In Coral Springs, the challenge is the opposite - keeping brutal summer heat and humidity out while letting natural light in. A poorly designed sunroom here turns into an oven by mid-morning from May through October. Insulated, low-emissivity glass and a properly sized cooling connection are the two things that separate a room you use daily from one you avoid.
If you want to compare your options before committing, take a look at our three season sunrooms page, or see how a four season build compares to an all season room in terms of features and finish levels.
If your screened porch or lanai sits unused from May through October because the heat and humidity make it unbearable, that is a clear sign a temperature-controlled room would actually get used. Adding insulated glass and connecting to your AC turns wasted outdoor space into daily living space.
A four season sunroom makes a naturally bright, quiet workspace that feels separate from the rest of your home. In Coral Springs, you can have green views and natural light every day of the year - it is one of the most enjoyable places to spend a workday.
A sunroom with floor-to-ceiling glass on three sides changes the feel of a closed-off home completely. It brings in daylight, creates a visual connection to your yard, and makes the whole interior feel larger and more open.
A four season sunroom adds a real, finished room at a lower cost and faster timeline than a traditional addition. Whether you need a reading room, a playroom, or a casual dining area, it gives your family useful space without months of construction tearing through your home's interior.
There is no single four season sunroom - the design depends on your lot, your home's existing structure, and what you want the room to do. We build gable-roof rooms that feel like a formal addition, shed-roof builds that work well off the back of a ranch home, and studio-style rooms with glass on three sides and a solid ceiling. Every build uses insulated framing and low-solar-gain glass rated for Broward County's wind requirements. For homeowners who want a room that goes beyond a standard sunroom, our all season rooms offer additional finish and insulation options.
We also handle conversions from existing screen rooms or three-season enclosures - replacing the screen or single-pane panels with insulated glazing and connecting the room to climate control. If you are starting from an existing structure, see our three season sunroom page for a full breakdown of what that upgrade involves.
A peaked roof that mimics your home's existing roofline - popular for homeowners who want the addition to look like a permanent part of the house.
A single-slope roof that attaches cleanly to the back wall of your home - cost-effective and a good fit for ranch-style Coral Springs homes.
Glass on three sides with a flat or low-slope roof, maximizing light and the outdoor view - well suited for pool-facing additions.
Upgrade an existing screen enclosure to insulated glazing and climate control using your existing slab and structural framing where possible.
A dedicated mini-split or a branch off your existing duct system keeps the sunroom from affecting your home's main cooling load.
Tile, luxury vinyl, or sealed concrete floors with trim, ceiling fans, and recessed lighting to match your home's interior.
Most of the country uses the term "four season" to mean a room that stays warm in winter. In Coral Springs, winter is easy - the challenge is keeping a glass-enclosed room comfortable from June through September, when daily afternoon thunderstorms roll through and temperatures push into the low 90s. South Florida's rainy season brings fast, heavy rainfall that stresses roof connections, drainage design, and every sealed joint in a sunroom's structure. We design for water management from the first day of planning, not as an afterthought.
Homes in Coral Springs are also built on flat, low-lying land with a naturally high water table. Slab drainage and foundation elevation matter more here than in areas with natural slope, and we account for that in every foundation design. We serve homeowners throughout the area - including Parkland and Coconut Creek - where the same climate and code conditions apply. For more on how Florida's wind and weather conditions affect building standards, the Florida Building Commission maintains the current state building code, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration publishes detailed climate data for Broward County.
Call or submit a request and we follow up within 1 business day. Let us know the space you have in mind and how you want to use the room - that is all we need to schedule a visit.
We visit your home, measure the footprint, and assess the site. You get a written proposal with a firm price covering scope, materials, glazing specs, and timeline - before any commitment.
We submit engineered drawings to the building department and handle the permit follow-up. If your community has an HOA, we help you understand what to submit and how to time both approvals so they do not hold each other up.
Framing and enclosure happen mostly from the outside of your home. After the city inspector signs off, we walk through the finished room with you - checking every seal, every window, every detail - before we consider the project complete.
We come to your home, take measurements, and give you a written quote with a firm price before any commitment. Response within 1 business day - no obligation, no pressure.
(754) 318-0068We build with low-emissivity insulated glass and wind-rated framing systems designed for Broward County's high-wind zone. The same glass spec that works in a northern state is the wrong choice here - we know the difference and specify accordingly.
We submit the permit application, provide the engineered drawings, and follow up with the building department throughout the review. A contractor who asks you to handle the permit yourself is a warning sign - we never do that.
Coral Springs has a large number of HOA-governed communities. We know how to prepare the right documentation and how to time the HOA submission alongside the city permit so both processes move in parallel rather than one waiting on the other.
We have worked across this city long enough to know the neighborhoods, the permit office, and the drainage and soil conditions that affect foundation design. That local knowledge shows up in how smoothly your project runs.
Every one of these proof points exists because we have seen what goes wrong when they are ignored - permits skipped, wrong glass installed, HOA reviews missed. We build in a way that protects your investment and gives you a room you will still be happy with five years from now. You can verify Florida contractor licensing at myfloridalicense.com.
A lower-cost enclosed room suited for Coral Springs's dry season months - no climate control, but protected from bugs and rain.
Learn MoreHigher insulation values and additional finish options for homeowners who want the most comfortable and energy-efficient enclosed room possible.
Learn MoreCall or submit a request today - spots fill up, and the sooner we schedule your free estimate, the sooner we can get your project on the calendar.