
Your screened porch is too hot to use half the year. An all season room changes that - fully enclosed, climate-controlled, and built for Florida's heat and humidity.

All season rooms in Port Orange are fully enclosed additions with insulated walls, a proper roof, and a heating and cooling system - most projects take eight to sixteen weeks from permit approval to final walkthrough. Unlike a screened porch or a three season sunroom, an all season room stays genuinely comfortable every month of the year, including the long Florida summer.
Port Orange homeowners often reach this decision after years of watching a screened porch sit empty from May through October. If you have outdoor square footage you are not using because the heat and humidity make it unpleasant, an all season room in Port Orange is the most complete answer to that problem.
This is different from a quick renovation. It is a permitted structural addition that ties into your home, adds real appraised square footage, and is built to Florida's wind-load requirements. If you want to understand what the process looks like before making any decisions, we are happy to walk you through it. Call us or request a free estimate.
If your screened porch or lanai goes unused from May through September because of heat and humidity, that space is working against you. Port Orange summers regularly push into the low 90s with high humidity, and a screened room offers no protection from that heat. An all season room solves the problem permanently.
If your household needs a dedicated home office, a reading room, or a guest space, an all season room is one of the most cost-effective ways to add that square footage. You get a room that functions like any other in your home, without the cost of a full structural addition.
Port Orange homeowners with pond views, mature oak canopy, or landscaped backyards often find that afternoon heat and daily thunderstorms make sitting outside impractical for most of the year. An all season room puts you next to that view in real comfort, no matter what is happening outside.
A properly permitted all season room adds real appraised square footage to your home. Florida buyers actively seek flexible, comfortable living space - especially buyers relocating from colder states. An unpermitted or poorly built enclosure can complicate a sale, so doing it right matters both for your enjoyment and your resale position.
Every all season room project starts with what you already have. Some homeowners are converting an existing screened lanai. Others are adding a room where there was only a concrete slab. The path is different in each case, but the outcome is the same: a room you can use every month of the year. If you are also considering whether a enclosed patio room might suit your existing outdoor footprint better, we can talk through both options during your estimate.
For homeowners comparing a full all season room to a four season sunroom, the differences come down to how the room is framed and finished. We build both and can explain the trade-offs clearly based on your home's layout and your goals for the space.
Best for homeowners who want a permanent, climate-controlled room that adds appraised square footage and functions like any other room in the house.
Best for homeowners with an existing screened porch or lanai who want to convert it into an enclosed, weather-protected space without starting from scratch.
Best for homeowners who want full independence from the home's existing HVAC, with a dedicated wall-mounted unit that cools and dehumidifies the new space.
Best for homeowners in Port Orange communities with architectural review requirements - we handle the HOA submission alongside the county permit.
Port Orange sits in Volusia County on Florida's central Atlantic coast, where summer temperatures regularly top 90 degrees and humidity stays high for months. The screened porch culture is strong here - most homes have one - but screens offer no defense against summer heat. That is why all season room projects in Port Orange tend to be driven by homeowners who are tired of having outdoor square footage they cannot actually use. From the neighborhoods near Dunlawton Avenue to the communities along the Halifax River, the demand for year-round usable space is consistent across the city.
Florida's wind-load building requirements also shape how all season rooms are built here. Every permitted addition in Volusia County must meet the state's wind-resistance standards, which affects window selection, roof connections, and framing. This adds some cost compared to builds in other states, but it also means the room is built to last through storm season. We serve homeowners across the area, including Deltona and New Smyrna Beach, where the same local conditions apply.
We respond within one business day. You tell us about the space you want to enclose and what you want to use the room for - that helps us come prepared when we visit your home.
We measure the space, check your existing roofline and slab, and walk through your options. You leave the meeting knowing what the project will cost and how long it will take - no vague ranges.
Once you sign, we submit your permit application to Volusia County on your behalf. Plan for two to four weeks of review time - this is a legal requirement, not a contractor delay.
Framing, windows, roofing, and finishing typically take two to six weeks. A county inspector confirms the work meets code before we consider the job complete, then we walk through the finished room with you.
Free estimate, no pressure. We respond within one business day and bring clear numbers to your home.
(386) 284-1782We size cooling systems specifically for glass-heavy rooms in Port Orange's heat and humidity - not just a vent from your existing system. Windows are selected for their heat-gain ratings, not just appearance.
We pull your Volusia County building permit, handle any HOA architectural review submission, and schedule all required inspections. You do not have to deal with the county or your HOA office directly.
Every all season room we build meets Florida's wind-resistance requirements for Volusia County. That means no leaks where the new roof meets your existing one, and no windows that rattle when a storm rolls through. Florida Building Commission
We take the time to match your existing home's roofline, siding, and flooring so the addition looks like it was always part of the house - not an afterthought bolted to the back.
We have been building all season rooms and sunroom additions for Port Orange homeowners since 2022, and we know what it takes to get a project permitted and built correctly in Volusia County. Every job we complete is fully permitted and inspected - so when you sell, the paperwork is in order.
Convert your existing patio into a permanent, weather-protected room that adds livable space to your Port Orange home.
Learn MoreA glass-forward alternative to an all season room, designed for homeowners who want maximum natural light alongside year-round comfort.
Learn MorePermit slots in Volusia County fill up - the sooner we submit your application, the sooner you could be enjoying your new room before next summer.