StrongMark Delray Beach Sunrooms brings sunroom construction expertise to Delray Beach, specializing in four-season rooms, three-season sunrooms, and patio enclosures built to handle South Florida\'s coastal humidity and hurricane-force winds. We respond to inquiries within 1 business day and pull permits through the City of Delray Beach Building Division on your behalf.

Delray Beach homeowners choose sunroom additions to gain year-round living space without the cost of a full home addition. A properly built sunroom here means impact-rated glass, connections to your HVAC system, and a foundation tied correctly into your existing slab so the room stays level on sandy soil.
In a climate where summer heat makes uninsulated spaces unusable for six months, a four-season sunroom with full climate control is the only way to get real value from the square footage you are adding. This means insulated walls, low-E glass, and direct connection to your home\'s air conditioning.
A three-season room gives Delray Beach homeowners a comfortable retreat from October through May, when coastal breezes and mild temperatures make outdoor living pleasant. These rooms work best for homeowners who understand they will use the space seasonally rather than year-round.
Converting an open patio into an enclosed space protects you from afternoon thunderstorms and keeps bugs out while preserving the outdoor view. Many Delray Beach homes have existing concrete slabs that make patio enclosures faster and less disruptive than building from scratch.
A screened enclosure gives you access to fresh air without mosquitoes and no-see-ums, which are a year-round problem in coastal South Florida. Screen rooms cost less than fully enclosed sunrooms but offer limited protection from rain and no climate control.
Homes in Delray Beach vary widely in age, style, and roofline. A custom sunroom accounts for your existing structure\'s design and ensures the new room integrates seamlessly rather than looking like an afterthought bolted onto the back of your house.
Delray Beach sits in Palm Beach County\'s high-wind zone, which means any room addition must be built to withstand hurricane-force winds. The glass, framing, roof connections, and foundation all have to meet specific wind resistance standards set by the Florida Building Code. This is not optional, and it is one of the biggest reasons sunroom costs in this area run higher than national averages. A contractor who does not mention wind-rated materials upfront is leaving something important out.
Year-round heat and humidity create their own set of challenges. Delray Beach averages more than 230 sunny days a year, and summer heat indexes regularly exceed 100°F. A sunroom that is not properly insulated and connected to your home\'s air conditioning system will be unusable for six months of the year. On top of that, the city\'s flat lots and sandy soil with a high water table affect how foundations are poured and how drainage is handled around the new structure. A contractor who does not account for local soil conditions may build a room that shifts or develops drainage problems within a few years.
Our team has completed sunroom projects throughout Delray Beach for over a decade, pulling permits through the City of Delray Beach Building Division and navigating HOA approvals in communities like Kings Point, Rainberry Bay, and neighborhoods along Atlantic Avenue. We work regularly on concrete block homes built in the 1960s through 1980s, which make up a large share of the housing stock here.
Delray Beach\'s main corridor runs along Atlantic Avenue, from the beach westward through downtown. Many of the city\'s older single-family homes sit in neighborhoods like Lake Ida and Tropic Isle, while 55-plus communities cluster along Military Trail to the west. Each area has different building stock, HOA rules, and foundation conditions.
We also serve nearby Boynton Beach, FL and West Palm Beach, FL, both within a short drive of Delray Beach.
We ask about your space, budget, and HOA situation before scheduling an in-home visit to measure, assess your existing structure, and discuss options. You will know within 1 business day when we can meet.
After the site visit, we provide a detailed written estimate breaking down foundation work, framing, glass, roofing, and HVAC connections. Cost transparency up front means no surprises later.
We submit the permit application to the City of Delray Beach Building Division and handle HOA submissions if needed. This phase takes two to six weeks, and we keep you updated throughout.
Once permits are approved, we complete foundation work, framing, glass installation, roofing, and HVAC connections. City inspections happen at key milestones, and we walk you through the finished room before final payment.
We handle permits, HOA approvals, and inspections in Delray Beach so you don't have to.
Delray Beach is a city of roughly 70,000 people in Palm Beach County, known for its walkable downtown and active Atlantic Avenue corridor lined with restaurants, shops, and galleries. The city has a mix of long-term residents and seasonal snowbirds who spend winters here. Housing stock ranges from 1950s concrete block ranch homes in neighborhoods like Lake Ida and Tropic Isle to newer townhouses and large 55-plus communities such as Kings Point and Delray Villas. Many homes sit on flat, sandy lots just a few feet above sea level, with little natural drainage.
The city\'s coastal location means salt air, intense sun, and frequent afternoon thunderstorms from June through September. Homes here face constant exposure to moisture and UV degradation. Nearby communities include Boca Raton, FL to the south and Boynton Beach, FL to the north, both within Palm Beach County.
Delray Beach homes need sunrooms built to handle coastal conditions - we have been doing this work here for over a decade.