StrongMark Delray Beach Sunrooms is a sunroom contractor serving Pompano Beach, FL with patio-to-sunroom conversions, screen room installations, and four season sunrooms built for Broward County canal-front properties, Intracoastal homes, and coastal salt air exposure. We have completed sunroom projects throughout Pompano Beach since 2018 and respond to all inquiries within one business day.

Many Pompano Beach homes have existing concrete patios that sit unused because of bugs, rain, and intense afternoon sun. A patio-to-sunroom conversion encloses that space with hurricane-rated screens or glass, creating a protected outdoor room without the cost of building a new addition from scratch. This is one of the most cost-effective ways to add usable square footage to homes near the water.
Screen rooms are ideal for Pompano Beach homeowners who want bug-free outdoor living during the comfortable months from October through May without paying for full climate control. A screen room with a solid roof and modern aluminum framing provides shade, keeps out mosquitoes and no-see-ums, and stands up to South Florida rain and wind better than older screen enclosures from the 1970s and 1980s.
If you want a room you can use year-round in Pompano Beach, a four season sunroom with proper insulation and air conditioning is the right choice. These rooms are built to the same standard as the rest of your home and can handle summer heat indexes above 100 degrees without becoming uncomfortable, which makes them genuinely usable twelve months of the year.
Patio enclosures transform an open outdoor slab into a protected space where you can sit comfortably regardless of the weather. This is a practical choice for Pompano Beach properties where the existing patio is the right size and location but sits unused because of rain, bugs, or heat - enclosing it solves all three problems at once.
Sunroom additions give Pompano Beach homeowners more living space without the complexity of a full home addition that requires rerouting plumbing or reconfiguring floor plans. A sunroom built on a new foundation adds real square footage to your home and works as a flexible space for a home office, reading room, or guest area.
Pompano Beach has a diverse housing stock that includes everything from 1950s concrete block bungalows to newer construction in communities like Palm Aire. A custom sunroom is designed to match your home's existing roofline, siding, and architectural style so the finished addition looks like an intentional part of the house rather than an afterthought.
Pompano Beach sits directly on the Atlantic coast with more than 20 miles of canals and waterways running through the city, which means a large share of homes are within a mile or two of saltwater. That proximity creates conditions most inland contractors do not encounter regularly. Salt air corrodes metal fasteners, window frames, and aluminum framing faster than you would see even a few miles west. Moisture levels stay high year-round because of the ocean and the Intracoastal, which means materials need to be sealed properly or they fail early. A sunroom built here with generic inland materials will show rust, corrosion, and seal failure within a few years - and by the time those problems become visible, they are expensive to fix.
The housing stock in Pompano Beach is another factor that shapes how sunrooms get built. Most homes were constructed between the 1950s and 1980s, and a large share of them are concrete block with stucco exteriors built on flat slab foundations. Attaching a new structure to a 40- or 50-year-old home requires assessing the condition of the existing wall, roof, and foundation before work begins. If the existing stucco has cracks or the roof flashing is aging, those issues need to be addressed before the sunroom goes up - because if they are not, the new addition can accelerate moisture intrusion into the old structure. A contractor who does not take that step is setting you up for problems that do not show up until after the work is paid for and the crew is gone.
Our crew has been pulling permits through Broward County's Building Division for sunroom projects in Pompano Beach since 2018, working on homes throughout the city from canal-front properties near the Intracoastal to single-family neighborhoods in Palm Aire and along Atlantic Boulevard. We know that many Pompano Beach homes sit on small to medium lots with limited space for staging equipment, and we plan delivery and access around those constraints.
The city has a strong waterfront identity. The Pompano Beach Fishing Village and the municipal fishing pier are central to local life, and the beachfront area has been redeveloped in recent years with new restaurants and public spaces. Atlantic Boulevard is the main east-west corridor that nearly every resident uses regularly, running from the Turnpike through downtown to the beach. Palm Aire is an established inland community known for golf courses and larger single-family homes, while neighborhoods closer to the beach have denser development with older homes and condos from the 1970s and 1980s. Homes near the water face faster wear on exterior materials from salt air, which is why we use corrosion-resistant fasteners and sealants on all waterfront projects.
We also work in nearby communities including Coconut Creek and Deerfield Beach, where similar housing stock and coastal conditions create the same challenges for sunroom construction.
When you reach out by phone or online, we respond within one business day to schedule a site visit at a time that works for you. We ask basic questions about the space you are considering, your budget range, and whether you have an HOA or condo association so we show up prepared.
We visit your home to measure the space, assess your existing foundation and structure, and discuss options for materials and layout. The visit typically takes 30 to 45 minutes, and you leave with a detailed written estimate that breaks down costs so you know what you are paying for. We address cost concerns during this visit and explain what drives pricing on waterfront properties specifically.
Once you sign the contract, we handle the permit application through Broward County and, if applicable, any HOA submissions. This phase typically takes two to four weeks depending on the county review queue. We manage the process and keep you updated so you are never left wondering where things stand.
Once permits are approved, construction begins with foundation work, followed by framing, roofing, and screen or window installation. Most projects take two to five weeks from start to final county inspection. We schedule inspections at key phases, and once the final inspection passes, the room is officially part of your home.
We serve homeowners throughout Pompano Beach, from canal-front properties to neighborhoods in Palm Aire and along Atlantic Boulevard. Call now for a free estimate.
Pompano Beach is a coastal city of about 115,000 people in Broward County, situated between Fort Lauderdale to the south and Deerfield Beach to the north. The city covers roughly 24 square miles and sits directly on the Atlantic Ocean with an extensive network of canals and waterways - more than 20 miles of navigable canals run through the city, many of them connecting to the Intracoastal Waterway. The housing stock is diverse, ranging from older concrete block homes built in the 1950s and 1960s to newer construction in inland communities like Palm Aire. Median home values run around $350,000, and roughly half of housing units are owner-occupied while the other half are rentals or seasonal properties.
The city has a strong waterfront identity centered around the Pompano Beach Fishing Village and the municipal fishing pier, both of which have been gathering spots for residents and visitors for decades. Atlantic Boulevard is the main east-west corridor that connects the Turnpike to the beach and runs through the heart of the city - nearly every resident knows this road by name. Palm Aire is an established residential community in western Pompano Beach built around golf courses, known for its larger single-family homes and long-time residents. Neighborhoods closer to the beach and the Intracoastal have denser development with condos and townhomes, many of them built in the 1970s and 1980s. We also serve nearby areas like Fort Lauderdale and Boca Raton, where similar waterfront conditions and housing patterns create the same challenges for sunroom construction.
From permit application to final county inspection, we handle every phase of your sunroom project. Call or submit an online inquiry now.