
A sunroom built without the right permits, the right glass, or the right cooling plan becomes a problem - not a room. We handle every step from slab to final inspection, so your new space is comfortable, code-compliant, and built to last through South Florida storms.

Sunroom construction in Coral Springs starts with a concrete slab, moves through framing and glass installation, and finishes with permit inspections - most residential projects take six to twelve weeks from signed contract to a finished, inspected room, with permitting and design often taking as long as the physical build.
In South Florida, construction quality is not just about aesthetics - it is about whether the room holds up when a storm rolls through and whether you can actually use it in August. The glass selection, roof design, and cooling plan are the decisions that determine a room you love versus one you avoid for six months a year.
If you are starting to plan, our sunroom additions page covers the different types of rooms and what each one costs and delivers in Coral Springs's specific climate.
A patio or backyard that sits empty from June through September because the heat and sun are too intense is not giving you the outdoor connection you paid for. Sunroom construction turns that unusable space into a climate-controlled room that works on the hottest days.
A sunroom is one of the most cost-effective ways to add a functional room without the full cost of a traditional addition. Most of the work happens outside, so your household routine is minimally disrupted until the final connection to your home is made.
Many Coral Springs homes have pools, lush landscaping, or canal views that are beautiful but punishing to sit near in summer. A sunroom positioned to face that view lets you enjoy it in air-conditioned comfort, with bugs and afternoon storms on the other side of the glass.
In South Florida's competitive real estate market, a permitted, well-built sunroom is a genuine asset. Buyers here respond to flexible, light-filled living space, and a properly documented addition holds up during inspections and appraisals in a way an unpermitted structure never will.
Every construction project starts with what you want the finished room to do. The type of room determines the scope of the build: a basic three-season enclosure requires less structural work than a fully insulated, climate-controlled four-season room. We discuss those options at the first visit and build from a detailed plan that reflects what Broward County requires for your specific property. Our sunroom remodeling service is available for homeowners with existing enclosures that need structural upgrading or conversion to full living space.
South Florida's building requirements are among the most demanding in the country for good reason. The framing, glazing, and anchoring system for your sunroom must all meet wind-load standards that are verified during the permit inspection process. Low-emissivity glass, a solid insulated roof, and a dedicated cooling source are the baseline for a room you can use year-round - not optional upgrades. We build to these standards on every project, regardless of room size.
A full build on an open area of your lot - foundation, framing, glass, and roof - giving you complete flexibility on size and layout.
Fully insulated and connected to climate control - the right choice for Coral Springs homeowners who want a room usable every day of the year.
A lighter build suited to homeowners who want weather and insect protection primarily during the drier, cooler months.
Replace existing screen panels with insulated glazing and add climate control, using your existing slab and roof structure where possible.
Build a fully enclosed, cooled room adjacent to or connecting with an existing screened pool enclosure.
We handle HOA submission and permit filing for communities that require both approvals before construction begins.
Coral Springs sits in northwest Broward County, where summer temperatures regularly reach the low-to-mid 90s and humidity stays high from May through October. The most important question for any sunroom built here is not how to keep it warm in winter - it is how to keep it cool and comfortable during a South Florida summer. Glazing selection, roof design, and cooling capacity are not secondary considerations in this climate. They are the primary engineering challenge, and getting them wrong results in a beautiful room that no one uses. We design every construction project with the worst summer day as the standard, not an average.
Broward County's building code requires that all permanent structures meet the wind-resistance standards for a high-wind zone, and the permit process confirms that your sunroom meets those requirements before the project is closed out. Most Coral Springs homes are also subject to HOA rules that govern the appearance and materials of exterior additions - and those approvals have to happen before a permit is filed. We work across the area regularly and know what the local building department and HOA reviewers look for. Homeowners in Margate and Coconut Creek face the same requirements, and we bring consistent knowledge of those processes to every project. The Florida Building Commission maintains the statewide building code that applies to sunroom construction throughout Broward County.
We respond within 1 business day. Tell us about your space, how you want to use the room, and any HOA or lot restrictions you are aware of. That is enough to get started.
We visit your property, take measurements, and review site conditions including drainage and the existing structure. You receive a detailed written proposal with a firm total price - no guesswork, no add-ons after signing.
We handle HOA documentation if your community requires it, then file the permit application with the building department. We manage the review process and keep you updated so you are never left wondering where things stand.
Physical construction happens largely on the exterior of your home. After permit inspections are passed, we do a final walkthrough with you - reviewing every seal, connection, and finish detail before we call the project complete.
We respond within 1 business day - no obligation, no pressure. Submit a request and our office will call to schedule a free on-site estimate at your home.
(754) 318-0068Framing, glazing, and anchoring systems on every build meet the high-wind-zone requirements that Broward County's building department verifies during inspection. We do not cut costs by using components rated for lighter-wind regions.
We handle the full permit process: application, engineering drawings, and every required inspection. A contractor who asks you to pull the permit yourself shifts liability to you - that is not how we work. Your sunroom is fully on the record when we finish.
We specify low-emissivity glass, insulated roof panels, and appropriately sized cooling on every project. South Florida summers will punish a room built to national-average standards. We build to what Coral Springs actually demands, not what a catalog suggests.
We know the HOA review processes in Coral Springs neighborhoods, the soil and drainage conditions across the city, and how the local permit office runs. That experience keeps your timeline predictable and prevents the kinds of delays that drag projects out for months.
These factors separate a sunroom that adds value and daily comfort from one that creates problems at resale or sits empty in the summer. Confirm any Florida contractor's license status at myfloridalicense.com before you sign anything.
Upgrade or structurally improve an existing sunroom or enclosure that no longer meets your needs or current building standards.
Learn MoreA focused look at the different types of sunroom additions available and what each option costs and delivers for Coral Springs homeowners.
Learn MoreBuild calendars fill fast - call or request a free estimate today and get your project on the schedule before the next window closes.