
Bad design is the reason most sunrooms fail. We plan your layout, glazing, and roof style so your room is comfortable, code-compliant, and built to last in South Florida.

Sunroom design in Boca Raton covers the full planning phase: room size, roof style, glazing type, foundation approach, and how the addition ties into your home's existing structure. Most residential projects move from first consultation to approved permit in four to eight weeks, depending on plan review and HOA timelines.
Many homeowners come to us after a patio or screened porch left them wanting more. They want a real room - one that works year-round - but they are not sure where to start. The design phase is exactly where to start, because every decision you make later (glazing, roofing, HVAC) flows from it. If you are exploring options, our vinyl sunrooms page covers one of the most common material choices for South Florida homes.
In Boca Raton, getting the design right before anything is built saves you from the two most common expensive problems: a room that bakes in summer and a permit that fails inspection. We work through both from day one.
Your patio or screened porch goes unused from May through October because of heat, bugs, or afternoon rain. This is the single clearest sign that an enclosed room is worth the investment. A properly designed sunroom changes how your family uses the back of your home for every season.
You need a home office, a playroom, or a casual dining area, but interior renovations are too disruptive or expensive. A sunroom adds genuine square footage without tearing into your home's existing layout. In Boca Raton's real estate market, that extra room shows up in your listing and in your daily life.
An older screened porch or aluminum frame enclosure looks tired, leaks in a hard rain, or no longer meets current wind-load standards. Replacing it starts with a fresh design assessment - not just swapping panels. Boca Raton's building code has changed over the years, and any new enclosure must meet today's requirements.
If you find yourself pulling back curtains to catch a little light, a properly oriented sunroom addition can transform the feel of your entire living area. South Florida's sunshine is one of its great assets, and a well-designed room captures it. The positioning and glazing choices in the design phase determine whether the room brightens your home or overheats it.
Our design process starts with a site visit. We measure your existing outdoor space, assess the transition point where the new room meets your home, and talk through how you plan to use the room. From there, we develop a full design proposal: floor plan, roof style, glazing options, and a project estimate. We also review your HOA guidelines at this stage so there are no surprises later. If you want to compare material options, vinyl sunrooms are a popular choice for South Florida homeowners, and custom sunrooms give you the most flexibility in layout and finish.
Every design decision we make is filtered through one question: will this room be comfortable on a July afternoon in Boca Raton? That means the glazing type, the roof overhang, and the connection to your home's cooling system are all addressed in the design phase - not as afterthoughts once framing has begun. We also coordinate permit drawings and handle the application with Palm Beach County so you do not have to manage that process yourself.
Suits homeowners who want a complete plan covering layout, glazing, roof style, and permitting before any work begins.
Suits homeowners who want a low-maintenance, coastal-resistant frame with good solar-control glazing options.
Suits homeowners with a specific vision - unusual lot shapes, matching a complex roofline, or a particular architectural style.
Suits homeowners who already have a slab and partial framing and want to assess what can be reused before committing to a full rebuild.
Boca Raton sits in a high-wind zone, and every design we produce accounts for Palm Beach County's wind-load requirements. The frames, glazing panels, and roof connections must all be rated for the region's wind exposure - not just specified for looks or price. Beyond wind, South Florida's sun angle means that a south-facing or west-facing room needs more solar management than a north-facing one. We look at your lot orientation before recommending overhang depth, glazing coatings, or roof style. The other major local factor is drainage. Much of Boca Raton sits on very flat terrain with a high water table, and a poorly graded slab will pool water against your new addition after every heavy rain. We address grading and drainage in the design, not as an afterthought.
A large share of Boca Raton's residential communities require HOA architectural review before any exterior addition can be built. We prepare the drawings and materials the review board needs, and we are familiar with what most local boards look for. Our design work also reaches neighboring communities: we serve homeowners in Delray Beach and Boynton Beach where similar HOA and permitting requirements apply.
Call or submit the form and we get back to you within one business day. We ask about your space, your goals, and your HOA situation so we can come prepared.
We visit your home, take measurements, and assess the transition point between your house and the planned addition. You receive a full design proposal - floor plan, roof style, glazing options, and estimate - at no obligation.
If your community has an architectural review board, we prepare the submission package. Once HOA approval is in hand, we file the permit application with Palm Beach County and manage any plan review comments.
With permits approved, construction moves quickly - most residential sunrooms are framed and enclosed within one to two weeks. We schedule and are present for all required inspections, then do a final walkthrough with you before closing out the job.
No pressure, no obligation. Just a straightforward conversation about what you want and what it takes to build it right.
(728) 777-1327Every design we produce is evaluated against how the room will perform on a 93-degree July afternoon, not a mild January morning. That means glazing with solar-control coatings, proper roof overhangs, and a plan for cooling the space from the start. A designer who does not address heat management in Boca Raton's climate is skipping the most important part of the job.
Florida requires contractors performing structural addition work to hold a current state license, and ours is verifiable through the state's online lookup tool. We pull our own permits, handle all required inspections, and never ask homeowners to manage any part of the permit process. You can verify Florida contractor licenses at myfloridalicense.com.
We have prepared architectural review packages for communities throughout Boca Raton and the surrounding area. We know what most local boards require and how to prepare a submission that comes back approved rather than revised. That experience keeps your project on schedule and off your plate.
Every frame and glazing system we specify carries a Florida product approval for wind resistance. We can show you the documentation before you sign anything. In a market where storm damage is a real concern, using properly rated products and getting the permit inspected is what gives your sunroom its long-term value.
Sunroom design is not a separate service from sunroom building - it is the first and most critical step in getting a room you will actually use. When the design is done right, every phase that follows goes more smoothly and costs less to correct.
A durable, low-maintenance sunroom option that holds up well in Boca Raton's salt air and coastal humidity.
Learn MoreFully tailored sunroom additions designed to match complex rooflines, unusual lot shapes, or a specific architectural style.
Learn MorePermit season fills up fast in Palm Beach County. The sooner your design is done, the sooner your project gets in the queue.