
Jupiter Lanai Sunrooms & Patios serves North Palm Beach with screen rooms, patio enclosures, and sunroom additions built for canal-front and Intracoastal properties. We pull permits through the Village of North Palm Beach and reply within one business day.

Nearly every single-family home in North Palm Beach has a pool or lanai area, and a properly built screen room enclosure keeps insects out while letting the canal breeze through. For waterfront properties, we use heavier-weight mesh and marine-grade hardware that holds up against the salt air coming off the Intracoastal - not standard inland-spec materials that start showing corrosion within a few years.
North Palm Beach homeowners with older ranch-style homes often have large, underused slab areas behind the house. Converting that slab into an enclosed patio room adds livable square footage without touching the main structure, and at current village property values, the improvement more than justifies the cost.
For canal-front homes in North Palm Beach, a four season sunroom with insulated glass panels turns a view you currently can only enjoy from outside into a comfortable room you can use every day. Climate control is practical here - the combination of summer heat and high humidity makes an unconditioned room unusable for most of the year.
Most homes in North Palm Beach were built in the 1960s and 1970s on concrete block foundations with more land than the structure uses. A sunroom addition built off an existing exterior wall is a straightforward way to add a room without the complexity and cost of a full home addition - and the village's long-term, owner-occupied demographic means the investment holds its value.
Vinyl frame systems are a sensible choice for North Palm Beach properties near the water because vinyl does not corrode the way bare aluminum can in a salt-air environment. For homeowners who want a low-maintenance enclosure that holds up over the long term without repainting or re-coating, vinyl is worth a serious look.
North Palm Beach homeowners with pool decks and lanais exposed to the full force of the Florida sun see their outdoor furniture, surfaces, and landscaping take a beating. An attached solid patio cover provides meaningful shade, reduces heat gain against the back of the house, and extends the life of everything underneath it.
North Palm Beach sits between Lake Worth Lagoon and the Intracoastal Waterway, with a large share of homes on or near canals that feed directly into saltwater. Salt air is not an occasional visitor here - it is a constant. Standard aluminum frames and hardware that hold up fine in an inland suburb can show corrosion, pitting, and fastener failure within a few years on a North Palm Beach canal lot. A contractor who does not adjust material specifications for waterfront work is not a good fit for this village, regardless of price.
The village's housing stock adds a second consideration. Most homes were built between the late 1950s and the 1970s using concrete block construction on slabs with low roof pitches - the classic South Florida ranch style. Attaching a new screen enclosure or sunroom to a 60-year-old slab or exterior wall requires a proper assessment of the existing concrete before anything is bolted on. Skipping that step leads to structural problems later, and it is something a contractor familiar with North Palm Beach's mid-century building stock handles as a matter of course.
Permits for screen enclosures, sunrooms, and patio structures in North Palm Beach are filed through the Village of North Palm Beach Building Department - not Palm Beach County, as some contractors assume. The village has its own review process and inspection schedule, and we are familiar with both. We file the permit application and manage the inspection schedule so you do not have to track it yourself.
North Palm Beach is a compact village - just a few square miles - anchored by the village-owned country club on the Intracoastal and Anchorage Park with its marina and boat ramp. US-1 runs along the eastern edge, connecting the village to Palm Beach Gardens to the north and Riviera Beach to the south. The neighborhoods between the country club and the canal system are where most of the older ranch-style homes sit, and that is where we do a significant share of our screen room and enclosure work in the village.
We also serve homeowners in Lake Park to the south and Juno Beach to the north. If you are near the North Palm Beach border with either community, we cover your neighborhood on the same schedule.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and we reply within one business day. We ask about your property, what you want to build, and whether your lot is on a canal or near the water - so we can plan the right material spec before the visit.
We come to your North Palm Beach property, assess the existing slab, attachment points, and water exposure, and put together a written itemized estimate. There is no charge for the estimate and no pressure to commit on the spot.
We file with the Village of North Palm Beach Building Department and schedule work once permits are approved. Most screen room and enclosure projects in the village are complete within a few days of permit clearance, depending on size and scope.
We schedule the village inspection, walk through the completed work with you, and address anything that needs attention before we close out the job. You get a copy of the permit and inspection sign-off for your records.
We serve North Palm Beach homeowners directly - including canal-front and Intracoastal properties. Free estimate, no obligation.
(728) 221-1197North Palm Beach is a small incorporated village in Palm Beach County with about 13,000 residents. It sits between the Intracoastal Waterway to the east and US-1 to the west, and a large share of its homes back up to canals that connect to Lake Worth Lagoon and the Intracoastal. According to Wikipedia, the village developed primarily between the late 1950s and the 1970s, giving it a consistent mid-century character. Most homes are one-story concrete block ranch-style with attached garages, pool decks, and screened lanai areas - a building type well-suited to screen enclosure and sunroom work. The village has a high rate of owner-occupied housing and long-term residents who invest seriously in their properties.
Local landmarks include the village-owned North Palm Beach Country Club on the Intracoastal Waterway and Anchorage Park, which has a marina, boat ramp, and recreational facilities that residents use year-round. The village borders Palm Beach Gardens to the north, which is accessible via Northlake Boulevard, and sits just a few miles from downtown West Palm Beach. Homeowners in Palm Beach Gardens to the north and in Lake Park to the south are part of our regular service territory as well.
Glass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreWhether your home is on a canal or a few blocks inland, we build screen rooms, enclosures, and sunrooms that hold up in North Palm Beach conditions. Contact us for a free estimate.