
Jupiter Lanai Sunrooms & Patios serves Palm Beach with custom sunrooms, screen enclosures, and patio rooms built for barrier island properties. We handle ARCOM coordination and permit filing through the Town of Palm Beach, and we reply within one business day.

Palm Beach properties range from 1920s Mediterranean Revival estates to mid-century oceanfront condominiums - and no standard catalog design fits all of them. Our custom sunroom approach means we design around your existing roofline, opening geometry, and any ARCOM design guidelines that apply to your property, rather than trying to fit a prefab structure onto a home it was not designed for.
Palm Beach estates with large pool decks, loggias, or rear terraces are ideal candidates for a screen enclosure that keeps insects and debris out without blocking the ocean or garden views. For properties with historic loggias or archwork, retractable screen systems can preserve the open character of the original space while still providing protection when you need it.
The combination of ocean breeze and afternoon rain makes uncovered patios less usable on Palm Beach for much of the year. An enclosed patio room - whether screened, glass-paneled, or fully climate-controlled - extends the usable season and protects outdoor furnishings that take a beating from salt air and UV exposure at this latitude.
For Palm Beach homeowners who want to enjoy their ocean or Intracoastal views year-round without dealing with humidity and heat, a four season sunroom with insulated, impact-rated glass and climate control is the right solution. The barrier island's constant exposure to both sun and salt air demands impact-rated glazing - not standard residential glass - and we spec accordingly.
Many Palm Beach estates have underused covered terraces or slab areas that could become fully enclosed rooms with the right structural addition. On high-value properties where every square foot matters, a permitted sunroom addition adds functional living space without the disruption and cost of a full home addition.
For Palm Beach condominium owners and homeowners who want a low-maintenance frame system that resists the constant salt air on the island, vinyl framing is a practical choice. Vinyl does not corrode, does not need periodic repainting, and holds up better than bare aluminum in a coastal environment where salt exposure is daily and unavoidable.
Palm Beach sits on a narrow barrier island less than a mile wide in most places, with the Atlantic Ocean on the east and the Intracoastal Waterway on the west. That means every property - from a condo on the ocean side to an estate backing up to the Intracoastal - is within daily range of salt air. Standard aluminum frames and hardware that perform fine ten miles inland begin showing corrosion, pitting, and fastener failure on Palm Beach within a few years. Any contractor working here needs to adjust their material specifications accordingly, and that includes selecting glazing rated for wind load and impact resistance under Florida Building Code.
The Town of Palm Beach also has one of the most active architectural review programs in the state. Many properties fall under ARCOM review for exterior changes, and historically significant buildings are additionally governed by the Landmarks Preservation Commission. A contractor who does not understand this process will cause delays, generate design-revision cycles, and potentially produce work that requires modification after the fact. We check each property's review status before we design anything, and we factor permit and ARCOM timelines into every project schedule.
Our crew works throughout Palm Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Permits and structural additions go through the Town of Palm Beach Building Department - a separate municipal process from Palm Beach County - and exterior changes on many properties require an additional ARCOM design review submission before the permit is approved. We are familiar with both processes and handle the filing and coordination on our end.
The town runs along a 14-mile barrier island from just south of the Lake Worth Inlet to the town's southern boundary near Manalapan. Properties range from large oceanfront estates near The Breakers and Worth Avenue to smaller homes and condominiums on the mid-island and southern sections. We have worked on projects across this range and know that the scope, material requirements, and review process can vary significantly from one end of the island to the other.
We also serve homeowners just across the Intracoastal in West Palm Beach and north along the coast in Riviera Beach. If you are near the Palm Beach border with either community, we cover your area 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 location, the type of project you have in mind, and whether it is a historic or architecturally reviewed property - so we can plan for any ARCOM requirements before the site visit.
We visit your property, assess the existing slab or attachment points, and check the permit and ARCOM status for your address. You receive a written, itemized estimate before any decision is required - no pressure, no vague ballparks.
We handle the permit application with the Town of Palm Beach Building Department and, where required, the ARCOM design submission. We manage the review schedule and keep you updated - you do not need to track inspections or approval deadlines yourself.
Construction is scheduled to minimize disruption to the property. We coordinate final inspections, clear the job site when work is complete, and walk you through the finished space before we leave - including any maintenance notes for salt-air environments.
We serve Palm Beach homeowners with permitted, architecturally appropriate sunroom and enclosure projects. Call us or submit the form for a free estimate - we reply within one business day.
(728) 221-1197Palm Beach is a small incorporated town of roughly 9,000 to 10,000 residents on a narrow barrier island in southeastern Palm Beach County. The town runs from the Lake Worth Inlet in the north to its southern border near Manalapan, spanning about 14 miles of oceanfront and Intracoastal frontage. The housing stock is defined by its extremes - historic oceanfront estates designed by Addison Mizner in the 1920s Mediterranean Revival style at the high end, and luxury condominiums built between the 1960s and 1990s along the ocean corridor. Worth Avenue, the town's famous shopping and dining street near the mid-island, marks the social center of the community. Many homeowners are seasonal residents who arrive in November and leave in April, which means some homes go through extended periods of limited oversight and deferred maintenance.
The Town of Palm Beach has one of the most active historic preservation and architectural review programs in Florida, governed by the Landmarks Preservation Commission and the Architectural Commission (ARCOM). These programs reflect the town's serious commitment to maintaining the architectural character that defines it. Homeowners planning any exterior work should expect review as part of the standard process - and should work with contractors who are familiar with it. Neighboring communities West Palm Beach and North Palm Beach have their own municipal building departments and different review processes, so the experience from working in those towns does not automatically transfer to Palm Beach.
Glass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreCall today or submit the contact form for a free on-site estimate - we reply within one business day and handle ARCOM coordination and permitting from start to finish.