
Your patio already has a slab and a roof. We enclose it into a permanent, air-conditioned room that adds square footage - and you can actually use it in August.

Enclosed patio rooms in Port St. Lucie convert an open or screened outdoor space into a permanent indoor room with solid walls, sealed windows, a proper roof connection, and climate control - most projects take three to six weeks of active construction after permits are approved, with a total timeline of eight to fourteen weeks from first call to finished room.
The key difference from a screened porch is that an enclosed patio room is considered livable square footage. It adds to your home's footprint in a way a screen enclosure cannot, and it is usable every month of the year in Port St. Lucie's climate. Many homeowners who start here later upgrade to a fuller all season room with higher-end insulation and finishes - but the enclosed patio room is often the right starting point if you want to move quickly and stay within a tighter budget.
Port St. Lucie homes built between 1980 and 2005 were designed with open lanais and patios that were always meant to be enclosed. If your home is in that range, your slab and roofline are probably already well-positioned for a conversion. That head start makes the project faster and more cost-effective than building from scratch.
If you walk past your screened porch all summer without stepping in because the heat makes it unbearable, that space is not delivering any value. In Port St. Lucie, the outdoor season without cooling is genuinely short - and an enclosed, air-conditioned room changes how you use your home every single month of the year.
South Florida's humidity is hard on anything stored in an open or screened space. Cushions mold, wood warps, and electronics corrode faster than you expect. If you have replaced outdoor furniture more than once or noticed rust and mildew appearing quickly, a fully enclosed and climate-controlled room would protect your belongings and save you money over time.
Screen enclosures in Port St. Lucie take a beating from summer storms. If yours has torn screens, bent framing, or a roof that has been patched more than once, it may be at the end of its useful life. Rather than replacing like-for-like, many homeowners use that moment to upgrade to a fully enclosed room that will hold up better through future storm seasons.
In the Port St. Lucie real estate market, enclosed living space is valued differently than a screened porch. A properly permitted, air-conditioned room adds to your home's appraised square footage in a way a screen enclosure simply cannot. If you are thinking about selling in the next few years, this is an upgrade that shows up on paper - not just in photos.
Every enclosed patio room project begins with a look at what you already have - the existing slab, the roofline, and how the new walls and windows will connect to your home's structure. We can work from a screened porch that just needs walls and windows, or from a fully open concrete slab that needs framing built up from nothing. If you are starting from an open patio and want to go all the way to a fully insulated, climate-controlled space, the step up to an all season room is worth discussing before you commit to a plan - the cost difference is often smaller than homeowners expect, and the finished result is significantly more comfortable.
For homeowners who want to go further, we also handle solarium installation and patio cover installation for spaces where a full enclosure is not the right fit. We will be honest with you about which option solves your actual problem rather than selling you the most expensive one.
Best for homeowners who already have a screened enclosure and want to add walls, sealed windows, and climate control without rebuilding from scratch.
Suited for homeowners with an open concrete patio who want to enclose it fully - framing, roof connection, windows, insulation, and cooling all built new.
Ideal for homeowners whose existing AC system does not have the capacity for added square footage, getting a self-contained wall-mounted unit sized for the new room.
Designed for homeowners in Port St. Lucie managed communities who need architectural drawings and written association approval before the county permit can be pulled.
Most of Port St. Lucie's housing stock was built between 1980 and 2005, and a large share of those homes came with screened lanais or open concrete patios - spaces that were designed to eventually be enclosed. The infrastructure is already there. That makes an enclosed patio room conversion faster and more affordable here than in cities where you are starting with bare ground. Florida's building code adds requirements that other states do not have - hurricane-rated windows, reinforced roof connections, and energy compliance documentation - but those requirements are also what make the finished room genuinely durable through the storm seasons Port St. Lucie regularly sees. The Florida Building Commission sets those standards for good reason: a permitted room built to code is built to last.
We work throughout the Port St. Lucie area, including the newer master-planned neighborhoods of Tradition where HOA approval is required before permits can be pulled, and established communities around Palm City where older homes often have a slab already in good shape. Wherever your home sits in the area, the process is the same: free estimate, written proposal, permits and HOA handled, and a finished room you can use the day we hand you the keys.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. We will ask a few quick questions - patio size, current setup, whether you have an HOA - so we come to your home ready to give you real numbers.
We visit your home, measure the space, and review the existing slab and roofline. You receive a written estimate that covers labor, materials, permits, and cleanup - so there are no surprise line items after work starts. Most homeowners receive their written proposal within a week of the visit.
We submit the building permit application to St. Lucie County and handle your HOA architectural review package if needed. County review typically takes two to four weeks. HOA review can add another two to four weeks. We keep you updated at each stage so you always know where things stand.
Once the permit is posted, framing starts. The loudest work - sawing and drilling - happens in the first few days. After that, the pace shifts to windows, insulation, drywall, and electrical. The county inspector visits at multiple stages, and you receive copies of the final sign-off before we close out the job.
Free estimate with no obligation. We handle the permits and HOA paperwork so you do not have to chase anyone down.
We pull the St. Lucie County building permit on every project before a single board goes up. You receive the permit documentation and the final county inspection sign-off in writing. That paperwork is what keeps your home insurable and what a future buyer's lender will require - so it is not optional on any job we do.
A large share of Port St. Lucie's residential neighborhoods - including communities in Tradition, PGA Village, and St. James Golf Club - require HOA architectural approval before the county permit can even be pulled. We prepare the submission package, know what each board typically needs, and handle the back-and-forth so you are not chasing an architectural review committee on your own time.
Every window, framing connection, and roof attachment in your enclosed patio room is specified to meet Florida's current residential building code. That means impact-rated glass and reinforced connections that will hold up to the wind loads Port St. Lucie's storm season brings. The county inspector's sign-off confirms it independently - not just our word.
Proper insulation matters as much as the cooling unit in Port St. Lucie's climate. The U.S. Department of Energy notes that insulation is one of the most cost-effective ways to reduce cooling loads in hot, humid climates. We size your room's insulation and cooling together from the start so the new space does not spike your monthly electric bill.
A permitted, properly insulated enclosed patio room in Port St. Lucie is not just a comfortable space today - it is a documented, inspected asset that holds up through storm season and adds clean square footage to your home's record if you ever decide to sell.
A glass-walled, light-filled addition for homeowners who want maximum natural light along with a fully enclosed and climate-controlled space.
Learn MoreA step before full enclosure - a permanent covered structure that shades your patio and reduces heat gain without full walls and windows.
Learn MorePermit slots fill up quickly in St. Lucie County - lock in your project now and have your finished room ready before the next summer heat wave arrives.