StrongMark Delray Beach Sunrooms is a sunroom contractor serving Coconut Creek, FL with all season rooms, patio enclosures, and sunroom additions built for homes from the 1980s and 1990s. We handle permitting, HOA approvals, and respond to all inquiries within one business day.

An all season room gives you a climate-controlled space you can use comfortably year-round in Coconut Creek. Many homes here from the 1980s and 1990s have patios or existing screened enclosures that sit unused from May through October because of the heat, and an all season room solves that problem.
Coconut Creek homes typically have existing concrete patios that can be enclosed to create a protected room without pouring a new foundation. A patio enclosure keeps bugs out, blocks afternoon sun, and gives you a dry space even during summer thunderstorms that roll through every afternoon.
A four season sunroom with proper insulation, impact-rated glass, and air conditioning is the best choice for year-round comfort in Coconut Creek. Summer temperatures regularly push into the low 90s with high humidity, which makes a non-climate-controlled room unusable for months at a time without proper cooling.
If you need more living space but do not want to reconfigure your home's interior, a sunroom addition gives you a real room with natural light and views. This is a practical choice for Coconut Creek homeowners in planned communities who want flexible space for a home office, reading room, or hobby area.
Many Coconut Creek homes from the 1980s and 1990s have aging screen enclosures that need replacement. A new screen room installation with modern aluminum framing keeps bugs out, provides shade, and creates a protected outdoor space for entertaining without the cost of a fully enclosed climate-controlled room.
Coconut Creek has a mix of single-family homes, townhomes, and condos, many of which are in planned communities with architectural review requirements. A custom sunroom is designed to match your home's roofline, exterior finish, and HOA guidelines so the finished room looks like it was always part of the structure.
Coconut Creek sits in western Broward County, about five miles inland from the Atlantic coast. The city gets all the heat, humidity, and summer thunderstorms you would expect from South Florida, along with hurricane-season wind and rain that requires every new structure to be built to specific wind-resistance standards set by the Florida Building Code. A sunroom built here needs impact-rated or hurricane-rated glass, properly sealed connections between the new structure and your existing home, and framing designed to handle wind loads that would not be required in most other states. These are not optional upgrades - they are baseline requirements for a structure that will hold up over time in this climate.
The housing stock in Coconut Creek adds a second layer of complexity. Most homes here were built during the 1980s and 1990s using concrete block construction with stucco exteriors, and they are now 25 to 45 years old. At that age, the existing walls, roofs, and slabs need to be assessed before a sunroom is attached - because if the existing structure has moisture damage, aging stucco, or a slab that has settled unevenly, those issues need to be addressed before the new room goes up. A contractor who does not take that step is setting you up for problems you will not see until after the work is done and the crew has left. Many of Coconut Creek's neighborhoods are in planned communities governed by HOAs, which means architectural review approval may be required before work begins. A contractor familiar with local HOA processes can help you prepare the right documentation and avoid costly redesigns after the fact.
Our crew has worked on concrete block homes throughout Coconut Creek for years, pulling permits through Broward County's Building Division and completing sunroom projects in planned communities like Winston Park, Centura Parc, and neighborhoods near Sample Road. We know that many of these homes sit on small to mid-sized lots with modest yards, which means limited staging space and careful planning for equipment access during construction.
The city itself is fully built out, with very little undeveloped land left. Butterfly World inside Tradewinds Park is a landmark that nearly every resident knows, and Seminole Casino Coconut Creek on Stirling Road is one of the most visible features in the city. Homes near Butterfly World and along Wiles Road tend to be from the same 1980s and 1990s era, with the same concrete block and stucco construction that we see throughout western Broward County.
We also serve nearby communities including Margate and Pompano Beach, where similar housing patterns and climate conditions create the same challenges for sunroom construction.
When you call or submit an online inquiry, we respond within one business day to schedule a site visit. We ask a few questions over the phone about your property, your budget range, and whether you live in an HOA community so we show up prepared to have a productive conversation.
We visit your home to measure the space, assess your existing foundation and structure, and discuss your options for materials and layout. This visit typically takes 30 to 45 minutes, and you leave with a written estimate that breaks down costs by category so you can see where your money is going. We address cost concerns upfront and explain what affects pricing in Coconut Creek specifically.
Once you sign the contract, we handle the permit application through Broward County and, if applicable, the HOA architectural review submission. This phase typically takes two to six weeks depending on the county's review queue and your HOA's meeting schedule. We manage the process and keep you updated so you are never left wondering what the status is.
Once permits are approved, work begins with foundation preparation, followed by framing, roofing, and window installation. Most projects take three to six weeks from start to final inspection. We schedule county inspections at key stages, and once the final inspection passes, the room is officially part of your home and ready to use.
We serve homeowners throughout Coconut Creek, from Butterfly World to the communities along Wiles Road. Call today for a free estimate and site visit.
Coconut Creek is a city of about 60,000 people in western Broward County, sitting between Pompano Beach to the east and Parkland to the west. The city is known as the Butterfly Capital of the World because of Butterfly World, the largest butterfly park in the world, located inside Tradewinds Park on Sample Road. Most of Coconut Creek's housing stock was built during the 1980s and 1990s as Broward County expanded westward, and the city is now fully built out with very little undeveloped land remaining. Median home values sit around $350,000, and a large share of residents own their homes rather than rent, which creates a stable homeowner community where people invest in maintaining and improving their properties.
The housing mix includes single-family homes, townhomes, and condos, with many properties in planned communities governed by HOAs. Neighborhoods like Winston Park, Centura Parc, and Regency Lakes are well-established, and most homes are concrete block construction with stucco exteriors - the standard building method in South Florida. The city's flat lots and small to mid-sized yards are typical of the area, and many properties have existing patios or screened enclosures that homeowners consider upgrading or replacing. We also work in nearby communities like Coral Springs and Deerfield Beach, where similar housing patterns and HOA requirements create the same challenges for sunroom construction.
From permit applications to HOA approvals, we handle every step of your sunroom project. Call now or request a free estimate online.