
A fully enclosed, climate-controlled sunroom you can use in August just as comfortably as in December. Built to Florida's hurricane standards and fully permitted, start to finish.

Four season sunrooms in Port St. Lucie are fully enclosed room additions tied into your home's heating and cooling system, constructed to Florida's hurricane-rated building standards, and permitted through St. Lucie County - most jobs run two to six weeks of construction once permits are approved.
The key difference in this climate is the glass and the cooling system. Port St. Lucie averages around 233 sunny days a year, and summer heat index values regularly climb past 100 degrees. A room built with standard single-pane glass becomes unusable by mid-morning in July. A properly built four season sunroom uses insulated, low-emissivity glass and a cooling solution - either an extension of your existing AC or a dedicated ductless unit - that keeps the space comfortable all year. If you are still weighing whether a full four season build is right for you or something like our three season sunrooms would work instead, an in-person conversation is the fastest way to sort that out.
Port St. Lucie homes built in the 1980s through early 2000s often have concrete patios that can serve as the sunroom floor - which reduces foundation costs. We inspect the existing slab condition before building on it rather than assuming it is sound.
If your screened enclosure is empty from June through September because it is too hot and buggy, you are missing the months when you most want to be outside. A four season sunroom is climate-controlled, so it stays comfortable in Port St. Lucie's heat and humidity rather than cooking in it.
Port St. Lucie's rainy season brings heavy downpours, and if your existing porch or enclosure lets in water around the windows or at the roofline, that is a structural problem that will not fix itself. A four season sunroom built to Florida's current standards uses sealed, impact-rated glass and proper flashing that keeps water out even during tropical weather.
Many Port St. Lucie homes, especially those built in the 1990s, run out of room once a home office or hobby space enters the picture. A four season sunroom adds real, air-conditioned square footage without the disruption of a full interior renovation - and without moving.
Port St. Lucie buyers are looking for homes that deliver the Florida indoor-outdoor lifestyle. A fully permitted four season sunroom adds livable square footage and buyer appeal. The critical word is 'permitted' - unpermitted work is one of the first things a buyer's inspector flags.
A four season sunroom is a real room, and we design it around how you plan to use it. A morning coffee space needs different light orientation and glass selection than a home office that needs to block afternoon heat. A reading room has different acoustics and privacy needs than a family room connected to the kitchen. We talk through those details at the estimate visit before anything is drawn up.
For clients who want a full year-round room, the all season rooms we build carry the same climate-control and storm-rated construction as a four season sunroom, with some additional configuration flexibility. Both types are permitted, both use Florida-rated glass, and both are built to handle what hurricane season throws at them.
Connected to your home's existing AC or a new ductless mini-split - stays comfortable in Port St. Lucie heat every month of the year.
For homeowners in St. Lucie County's high-wind zone who want framing and glass that exceeds basic code - the right choice near the Treasure Coast.
Common in Port St. Lucie homes built between 1980 and 2005 - if your concrete patio is sound, we build up from it and reduce your foundation cost.
For homes without an existing slab or where the current concrete has settled or cracked - we pour a new foundation and build from there.
St. Lucie County sits in a high-wind zone, and every component of a sunroom - the glass, the framing, the roof-to-wall connection, and the point where the addition meets your existing home - has to be engineered for that reality. Florida has some of the strictest residential building codes in the country specifically because of the hurricane risk on the Treasure Coast. A contractor who does not bring up wind ratings during your estimate conversation has likely not built many sunrooms in this area. Our work in Port St. Lucie is reviewed by St. Lucie County inspectors at key stages, which is the strongest protection you have that the job was done right.
The HOA landscape here adds another layer. Planned communities like Tradition and PGA Village have active architectural review processes that can run two to six weeks before a permit is even filed. We handle that submission for you - drawings, material specs, and tracking - so your project does not stall while the committee meets. This is part of our standard process in every Port St. Lucie HOA community, not an add-on service.
We respond within 1 business day. A short phone conversation covers the space you have in mind, your goals for the room, and whether your community has an HOA - so we arrive prepared.
We visit, take measurements, assess your roof pitch, foundation condition, and electrical panel location, then discuss how you want the room to feel. You receive a written estimate within about a week.
We submit the HOA architectural review package if needed and file the building permit with the City of Port St. Lucie. You do not manage either step - and we track the timeline so nothing stalls.
Foundation, framing, insulated glass, roofing, and cooling system installation happen in sequence. After the city inspector signs off, we do a complete walkthrough and hand over all permit documentation.
We respond within 1 business day. The estimate is free and there is no obligation. After you submit, we call to schedule an in-person visit - because square footage and site conditions matter too much to price accurately over the phone.
Every four season sunroom we build in Port St. Lucie uses glass and framing that meet Florida's wind-load requirements. It is not an upgrade - it is what every sunroom here should be built with.
We spec the cooling solution - either an extension of your existing AC or a ductless mini-split - for the specific heat load of your sunroom. An undersized system is the most common reason Port St. Lucie sunrooms feel uncomfortable in July.
Whether your home is in Tradition, PGA Village, or St. James Golf Club, we prepare and track the architectural review package so you do not have to monitor committee meeting schedules yourself.
We have been building sunrooms in Port St. Lucie and the surrounding Treasure Coast for nearly a decade. We know St. Lucie County's permit process, common HOA requirements, and the local housing stock's specific construction characteristics.
Every detail - the wind rating, the cooling load calculation, the HOA submission timeline - reflects experience specific to Port St. Lucie, not generic contractor practice. The U.S. Department of Energy and the Florida Building Commission both publish guidance on what makes a sunroom comfortable and structurally sound in a hot, high-wind climate - we follow both.
A lower-cost enclosed room for homeowners who want more than a screened porch but do not need full HVAC integration.
Learn MoreYear-round room additions with flexible configuration options, designed for Port St. Lucie's climate from the ground up.
Learn MoreFall and winter are the busiest seasons for sunroom projects on the Treasure Coast. Contact us today so we can lock in your estimate visit before the calendar fills.