
Jupiter Lanai Sunrooms & Patios builds patio covers, screen enclosures, and sunroom additions throughout Wellington. We work with HOA communities in Olympia, Versailles, and across the village and file permits through the Village of Wellington Building Division. We reply within one business day.

Wellington afternoons from May through September bring daily thunderstorms, and an uncovered patio becomes unusable for months at a time. Our patio cover installation includes solid insulated panel covers and motorized louvered systems - both built to Wellington permitting requirements and designed to meet the aesthetic standards common in the village's HOA communities.
Most Wellington homes have pool decks or rear patios that are prime candidates for screen enclosures. Keeping mosquitoes and no-see-ums out of the pool area is a practical need in this part of South Florida, and a properly permitted enclosure also adds a visible improvement to the property that holds up in HOA review.
Wellington homes built in the 1980s and 1990s often have covered slab areas at the rear that are structurally ready for an enclosed sunroom addition. With high median home values in the village, a permitted sunroom addition is one of the more cost-effective ways to add functional square footage without a full interior renovation.
For Wellington homeowners who want conditioned living space rather than a seasonal porch, a four season sunroom with insulated glass and a dedicated HVAC connection gives you a room that is comfortable during summer heat and during the mild winters when the equestrian season brings visitors and activity to the village.
Wellington properties - from standard single-family homes in Olympia to equestrian estates in the western portions of the village - often have large rear areas where a partial or full enclosure would extend usable outdoor space. Larger lots give us more flexibility in how the enclosure is designed and anchored.
Wellington's flat terrain and high humidity make an all season room a practical upgrade over a basic screen enclosure. With proper insulation and climate control, the room stays dry and comfortable even during the intense summer months, giving you functional space that a screened porch simply cannot provide past May.
Wellington is one of the largest incorporated villages in the United States, covering roughly 47 square miles in western Palm Beach County. Most of its residential neighborhoods were built between 1985 and 2000 using concrete block construction with stucco exteriors - the standard method for South Florida at the time. That building stock is now 25 to 40 years old, and stucco in Wellington's heat and humidity can crack over time, creating entry points for moisture if exterior work is not done carefully. Any sunroom or enclosure attached to the home's exterior wall needs to be sealed and flashed properly so it does not create a new water intrusion path.
Wellington is also a planned community with organized neighborhoods, many of which operate under HOA governance. Gated communities like Olympia and Versailles have established processes for reviewing exterior changes, and contractors who do not know how to work within those systems can cause significant delays. The village's building permit process through the Village of Wellington Building Division runs alongside but separately from HOA review, and both need to be satisfied before construction can begin. We coordinate with both from the start so nothing falls through the gap.
Our crew works throughout Wellington regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The village is large enough that neighborhoods in the northern areas near Okeechobee Boulevard feel quite different from the equestrian properties along South Shore Boulevard in the south, and both require different site planning. We pull permits through the Village of Wellington Building Division and are familiar with the typical timeline for review, which runs independently of HOA approval in communities like Olympia, Versailles, and Palm Beach Polo.
Wellington is internationally known as an equestrian destination - the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center hosts major competitions from January through April, and the western portions of the village have genuine estate properties with multiple structures and large paved or gravel surfaces. On those properties, a patio cover or sunroom addition is often just one of several structures we are asked to assess. The more standard residential neighborhoods - particularly those surrounding Wellington Green mall on Forest Hill Boulevard - follow a more typical suburban layout with pool decks and rear patios well-suited to enclosures and sunroom additions.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Royal Palm Beach to the north and Palm Springs to the east. If you are near the Wellington border with either area, we cover your location on the same schedule.
Reach us at (728) 221-1197 or through the contact form on this site. We return every inquiry from Wellington homeowners within one business day - including calls made on Friday afternoon.
We visit your Wellington home, measure the space, review your HOA guidelines if applicable, and check any village setback or zoning requirements for your lot. You get a detailed written estimate at no cost before deciding anything.
We file the Village of Wellington building permit and prepare your HOA submission package. We track both review processes and keep you updated so you do not have to chase down status on your own.
Construction begins once all approvals are in place. Most Wellington projects complete within 4 to 8 weeks. We walk through the finished work with you and confirm the village inspection is passed before we close out the permit.
We serve Wellington and the surrounding western communities. No pressure, no hourly charge for the visit, and we handle all permitting and HOA coordination.
(728) 221-1197Wellington is an incorporated village in western Palm Beach County with a population of roughly 65,000 to 67,000 residents, making it one of the largest villages by population in the United States. It covers about 47 square miles and encompasses a wide range of neighborhoods - from standard suburban subdivisions like Olympia and Versailles near the center of the village to large equestrian estates in the south and west near the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center. The village was officially incorporated in 1996 but had been developing since the late 1970s, and most of its housing stock dates from the 1980s and 1990s. Concrete block construction with stucco exteriors is the standard throughout the community.
Wellington has a high homeownership rate and above-average median household income for Palm Beach County, and residents tend to invest in maintaining and upgrading their properties. The village government - the Village of Wellington - manages building permits and zoning, and many neighborhoods have active HOA boards that review exterior changes separately. Neighboring Royal Palm Beach sits directly to the north, sharing similar housing characteristics, building conditions, and suburban character, while the communities to the east transition toward the more urban areas of central Palm Beach County.
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Learn MoreWe build patio covers, screen enclosures, and sunroom additions throughout Wellington. Call today and we will reply within one business day.