
Coral Springs Lanai Sunrooms & Patios builds custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and four season rooms for Parkland homeowners. We have served Broward County since 2017, and we know Parkland's master-planned neighborhoods, HOA approval processes, and the city's permitting requirements.

Parkland homes were built inside master-planned communities where the HOA often has specific rules about exterior materials, colors, and roofline design. Our custom sunrooms are designed around each property and what the community allows, so you end up with a room that fits your home, satisfies the HOA, and passes the city permit inspection without surprises.
Parkland's proximity to the Everglades means high humidity that does not let up, even on cooler winter days. A fully insulated four season sunroom with dedicated climate control stays comfortable year-round regardless of what the thermometer reads outside, turning an underused patio or lanai into one of the most-used rooms in the house.
Many Parkland homes on quarter-acre lots have generous rear patios that become unusable from May through October because of the heat and afternoon thunderstorms. A properly built patio enclosure protects that space from rain and bugs while staying compliant with both the city code and HOA material standards common in neighborhoods like Heron Bay.
Parkland's flat, low-lying terrain holds moisture and supports a robust mosquito population throughout the warm months. A well-built screen room gives you and your family a place to enjoy the outdoors in the evenings without the bug pressure, and the open-frame design stays cooler than a fully glazed enclosure during the hottest part of the day.
A large share of Parkland homes built in the 1990s and 2000s have existing concrete slab patios that are structurally sound but never enclosed. If that slab is properly elevated and in good condition, converting it into a sunroom is a faster and more cost-effective path than building from scratch - permits and HOA approval still apply.
Parkland homes from the mid-1990s may already have a basic screen enclosure or older sunroom that was not built to current wind-load standards or lacks climate control. Updating that existing structure to meet current Broward County requirements and adding insulated glazing often costs less than a new build and delivers a far more comfortable result.
Most of Parkland's housing stock was built during a concentrated growth period from the mid-1990s through the 2000s. Those homes are now 20 to 30 years old, which puts original outdoor features - screen enclosures, uncovered patios, older lanais - squarely in the window where materials fail and homeowners start thinking about upgrades. Parkland sits on the Broward-Palm Beach county line, on flat, low-lying land where the western edge of the city borders the Everglades. That geography produces two conditions that are harder on outdoor structures than most of South Florida: persistently high humidity driven by the nearby wetlands, and a high water table that means any slab or frame sitting at grade level faces regular moisture exposure after heavy rain.
Parkland's zoning has always favored low density and generous lot sizes, which means homes often have more outdoor space than typical Broward suburbs - and more potential footprint for a sunroom or enclosure project. At the same time, the city's many gated HOA communities add a layer of approval requirements that contractors unfamiliar with Parkland do not always anticipate. A sunroom that looks fine on a permit drawing may still need HOA design approval before a single frame goes up. Broward County's wind-load requirements also apply in full here, and the coastal-adjacent humidity means material selection - particularly the choice of glazing, frame finish, and sealants - has a direct effect on how long the structure holds up.
Our crew works throughout Parkland regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. University Drive and Holmberg Road are the main corridors we travel getting to jobs in the city, and we know the neighborhoods on either side - the larger-lot homes closer to the Sawgrass Expressway, the well-established streets inside Heron Bay, and the properties near Nob Hill Road that sit closer to the county line. Parkland is a smaller city geographically, but the variety in lot size, HOA community rules, and proximity to water features means each project has its own set of considerations.
Because most Parkland homes were built to the same general spec during the same construction era, we see consistent patterns: concrete block construction with stucco, tile roofs, two-car garages, and rear patios that were sized generously but never enclosed. The soil throughout the area is sandy over limestone, which drains differently depending on the specific lot, and any slab work we do accounts for that. Homes near the western edge of the city are closest to the wetlands and tend to see more standing water after storms - something we factor into drainage design on any ground-level installation.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Coconut Creek to the south, where CBS construction and similar HOA communities are the norm. Homeowners in Coral Springs directly to the southwest call us regularly as well.
Call us or submit a request online and we respond within one business day. We schedule a free site visit at your Parkland property - no charge, no obligation - so we can see the space firsthand before discussing options.
We measure the footprint, assess the existing slab and drainage, and ask about your HOA requirements. You receive a written estimate that covers scope, materials, and pricing - no vague ballpark figures.
We submit the city permit application and provide the drawings your HOA needs for their review. Both processes run in parallel to minimize wait time. Permit review in Parkland typically takes two to four weeks; your project does not go on the schedule until both approvals are in hand.
Construction typically takes one to three weeks for a standard residential room once we are on site. After the city inspector signs off, we walk through the completed room with you, confirm every seal and panel is correct, and address any punch-list items before we consider the job done.
We serve Parkland homeowners and respond to every inquiry within one business day. Get a free estimate with no pressure and no obligation.
(754) 318-0068Parkland sits in the northwest corner of Broward County, stretching along the county line where Broward meets Palm Beach. The city covers roughly 12 to 13 square miles and has a population of around 35,000 residents, making it one of the less dense but more affluent cities in South Florida. Parkland was built with a deliberate focus on open space, low commercial density, and large residential lots. The city is known throughout Broward County for its park-like feel, generous greenbelts, and the quiet, low-traffic streets that run through its master-planned communities. Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School sits at the heart of the city and is a central landmark for local families. The western edge of the city borders the Everglades, giving Parkland a geography unlike any other city in the county.
Almost all of Parkland's residential development happened between the mid-1990s and the late 2000s, which means the housing stock is relatively consistent: concrete block construction with tile roofs, two-car garages, and rear patios or lanais, typically on quarter-acre or larger lots. Well-known communities like Heron Bay and Parkland Isles represent the character of the city well - gated, landscaped, and governed by active HOAs. Homeowners here invest in their properties, and outdoor living spaces are a natural part of that. For sunroom work specifically, Parkland's combination of large lots, consistent home construction, and HOA communities that care about how additions look from the street makes the planning process more detailed than in many nearby cities. Neighboring Coconut Creek to the south shares similar property types, and we work there regularly as well. Homeowners along the border with Coral Springs often reach out to us too, since the communities overlap near the University Drive corridor.
Keep pests out and breezes in with a professionally installed screen room.
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Learn MoreWe know Parkland's neighborhoods, HOA communities, and local permit process. Call us or request a free estimate and we will get back to you within one business day.