StrongMark Delray Beach Sunrooms is a sunroom contractor serving West Palm Beach, FL with sunroom remodeling, four season sunrooms, and patio enclosures built for homes ranging from 1920s Mediterranean Revival properties to modern construction. We have completed sunroom projects throughout West Palm Beach - from Flamingo Park to the downtown condos near Clematis Street - responding to all inquiries within one business day.

Many West Palm Beach homes have older sunrooms or screened enclosures that leak, feel drafty, or have outdated windows and insulation. Sunroom remodeling brings those spaces up to modern standards - new windows, better insulation, upgraded flooring, and climate control - so you actually use the room instead of avoiding it half the year.
West Palm Beach summers are hot and humid from May through October, with afternoon heat indexes regularly exceeding 100 degrees. A four season sunroom with proper insulation and air conditioning gives you a room you can use comfortably every month of the year, not just during the cooler winter and spring months.
If you have an existing concrete patio that sits unused because of heat, rain, or bugs, a patio enclosure turns that space into a protected room. West Palm Beach gets about 63 inches of rain per year, most of it falling between May and October, which means an open patio is unusable during much of the summer rainy season.
For homeowners who need more living space but do not want the cost and disruption of a full home addition, a sunroom addition provides a real room with natural light and outdoor views. This works especially well on West Palm Beach homes with side yards or backyards that currently go unused.
West Palm Beach has a wide range of architectural styles, from Mediterranean Revival homes in historic neighborhoods to modern construction downtown. A custom sunroom is designed to match your home's specific architecture and roofline so the finished room looks intentional rather than like an obvious add-on.
For homeowners who primarily use their outdoor space from October through April, a three season sunroom provides protection from bugs, wind, and rain at a lower cost than a fully climate-controlled room. These rooms work well during West Palm Beach's pleasant winter months when you do not need air conditioning.
West Palm Beach sits right along the Intracoastal Waterway, with the Atlantic Ocean just a few miles east. That kind of coastal exposure means homes here take a beating from salt air, which accelerates rust, corrosion, and wear on metal fasteners, roofing materials, and exterior finishes. A sunroom built in West Palm Beach needs to account for that salt exposure - using corrosion-resistant hardware, paying extra attention to sealing and weatherproofing, and choosing materials that hold up in a marine environment. A contractor who quotes you a price based on inland building standards is leaving out details that will cost you money in repairs a few years down the line.
The other factor is the city's age and architectural diversity. West Palm Beach has neighborhoods with homes built in the 1920s and 1930s - Mediterranean Revival and Mission-style properties with original stucco exteriors, clay tile roofs, and older foundation systems. Attaching a sunroom to a 90-year-old home requires careful integration - you need to assess the condition of the existing structure, match architectural details so the new work blends in, and account for the fact that older homes were not built with modern additions in mind. A contractor who has worked in West Palm Beach's historic districts knows what to look for and what challenges to expect. A contractor who has only built on newer homes will miss important details that can create problems later.
Our team has completed sunroom and patio enclosure projects throughout West Palm Beach for years, pulling permits through Palm Beach County's Building Division and working on homes from historic properties in Flamingo Park and El Cid to modern condos and townhomes near downtown. We know that older homes in the city often have clay tile roofs and original stucco exteriors that require specific techniques when attaching new construction, and we factor that into our estimates and timelines from the start.
West Palm Beach is the largest city in Palm Beach County, with about 117,000 residents and a wide mix of neighborhoods - from the waterfront areas along Flagler Drive to the historic districts west of Dixie Highway to the newer developments on the city's northwest side. Clematis Street is the main downtown corridor, and landmarks like Rosemary Square and the Palm Beach Zoo are familiar to most residents. We have worked across all of these areas and understand how building conditions, lot sizes, and property ages vary from one neighborhood to another.
We also serve nearby communities including Delray Beach and Lake Worth Beach, where similar coastal exposure and mixed housing stock create the same challenges for sunroom construction and remodeling.
When you reach out, we respond within one business day to schedule a site visit at a time that works for you. We ask a few basic questions upfront - the type of project you are considering, the space you have in mind, and whether your home has any unique features or challenges - so we can show up prepared to have a useful conversation.
We visit your home to measure the space, assess your existing structure, and discuss your options for materials, layout, and budget. On historic homes, we look at the condition of your existing walls, roof, and foundation to identify any challenges before we quote you a price. You leave this meeting with a written estimate that breaks down costs by category and addresses cost concerns directly. This visit typically takes 30 to 45 minutes, and you do not need to be present for the entire time if your schedule does not allow it.
Once you sign the contract, we submit the building permit application to Palm Beach County on your behalf. Permit review typically takes two to four weeks, and we manage the process so you do not need to visit any office or chase down approvals yourself. We keep you updated on the permit status so you always know where things stand.
Once permits are approved, work begins with foundation preparation or site prep, followed by framing, roofing, and window installation. Most projects take three to eight weeks from start to final inspection depending on size and complexity. 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 work on homes throughout West Palm Beach, from historic neighborhoods to modern construction. Call today for a free estimate and site visit.
West Palm Beach is the largest city in Palm Beach County, with about 117,000 residents and a wide mix of neighborhoods and architectural styles. The city sits right along the Intracoastal Waterway, with the Atlantic Ocean just a few miles east. Historic neighborhoods like Flamingo Park, El Cid, and Grandview Heights are filled with Mediterranean Revival and Mission-style homes built in the 1920s through 1940s, while downtown and the waterfront areas have seen significant new construction and redevelopment over the past two decades. Median home values in the city are around $350,000, though prices vary widely depending on location and property type.
Clematis Street is the main downtown corridor, lined with restaurants, bars, and shops, and it serves as a gathering spot for residents and visitors alike. Rosemary Square is a large outdoor shopping and entertainment district downtown, and the Palm Beach Zoo in Dreher Park is a well-known landmark that most families in the area have visited. We also serve nearby areas like Boynton Beach and Boca Raton, where similar building conditions and coastal exposure create the same challenges for sunroom projects.
From historic homes to modern properties, we handle every step of your sunroom project. Call now or request a free estimate online.