Port Orange Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is Daytona Beach's sunroom contractor for four season sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen room installations. We build to Florida's hurricane wind-load standards and use salt-resistant materials suited for homes along the Atlantic coast.

Daytona Beach homes from the postwar era through the 1980s often have aging screened porches or bare concrete slabs that sit unused through the long Florida summer. A properly insulated four season sunroom with low-e glass and climate control gives you a room you can actually use in August, not just on a comfortable February morning.
Many Daytona Beach homes sit on flat lots with concrete slabs that drain slowly after summer storms. A properly built patio enclosure raises your outdoor space above the standing-water problem while giving you a protected area that holds up to the wind gusts and heavy rain that come with Volusia County's hurricane season.
Daytona Beach's proximity to the Halifax River and the Intracoastal Waterway means mosquito and no-see-um pressure is persistent from spring through fall. A screen room built with UV-resistant aluminum framing and fine-mesh screening lets you enjoy the breeze without the bugs, and it holds up better in a coastal environment than standard hardware-store materials.
Daytona Beach has a large share of long-term homeowners and retirees who have lived in the same home for decades and want to add living space without the upheaval of moving. A sunroom addition on an existing foundation is one of the most practical ways to gain a new room - a home office, a reading space, or a place to entertain - without a full interior renovation.
Daytona Beach concrete block homes from the 1950s through the 1980s sometimes have older Florida rooms with aluminum frames that have corroded, glass panels that have fogged or cracked, and connections to the main structure that no longer seal properly. We update those spaces with modern materials that handle coastal humidity and salt air better than the originals did.
For Daytona Beach homeowners who want a lower-maintenance option, vinyl-framed sunrooms resist the salt air and UV exposure that eat through painted aluminum over time. They do not rust, they do not need repainting, and they hold up well in the kind of humid, coastal environment you find throughout Volusia County's beachside communities.
The bulk of Daytona Beach's housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1980s using concrete block construction, which was the standard method throughout Florida during those decades. These homes are now 40 to 70 years old, and the original outdoor structures - screened porches, aluminum Florida rooms, open patios - are reaching or past the end of their useful lives. Salt air from the Atlantic accelerates that wear for homes on the beachside, corroding metal frames and breaking down caulk and paint faster than inland homes experience. Homeowners in the older beachside neighborhoods face more frequent exterior maintenance cycles than they would a few miles west of US-1.
Florida's building code requires sunrooms and patio enclosures to meet hurricane wind-load standards, and Daytona Beach sits on the Atlantic coast directly in the path of tropical storms that move up from the south each fall. Volusia County has seen significant storm damage from hurricanes in recent years, including Hurricane Ian in 2022. Any sunroom that cannot pass a Daytona Beach building inspection is not just a code problem - it is a liability when a storm rolls in. The flat, low-lying lots common throughout the city also mean that drainage around the foundation matters, and a contractor who has worked in this area regularly knows what to look for before pouring a new slab.
Our crew works throughout Daytona Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Daytona Beach Building Services office and are familiar with their plan review timelines and what inspectors typically look for on enclosure and addition projects in this city.
Daytona Beach is a city most people know by a few fixed landmarks - the Daytona International Speedway on the west side of town, the Boardwalk and Main Street Pier at the heart of the beachfront, and the Halifax River running north to south as the boundary between the mainland and the barrier island. Homes west of US-1 in neighborhoods like Midtown are older and sit on flat lots with aging concrete block structures. Beachside homes on the barrier island face more aggressive salt air exposure and need materials chosen accordingly. Halifax Health and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University anchor the city's year-round employment base, which means a large population of long-term residents - not just seasonal visitors - who invest in their properties.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Holly Hill, which sits just north of Daytona Beach along the Halifax River and shares many of the same building stock and permit conditions. Our team works the same stretch of coastal Volusia County regularly, so the process and crew are consistent whether your home is in Daytona Beach or the surrounding communities.
Reach us by phone or the contact form and we will respond within 1 business day. You do not need plans or a fixed budget to start - just a general sense of what you want the space to do.
We visit your property, check the existing slab or foundation, and assess drainage conditions - important on Daytona Beach's flat lots. We discuss realistic cost ranges at this visit, not after you have signed anything.
We handle the permit application with the City of Daytona Beach Building Services office and schedule construction to begin once approval is in hand. A standard enclosure typically takes one to four weeks to build, and you do not need to be home the entire time.
The city inspector signs off on the completed work, and we walk through the finished room with you before the job is closed out. You leave with permit documentation and a room that is ready to use.
We serve Daytona Beach homeowners from the beachside barrier island to the inland neighborhoods west of US-1. Call us or fill out the form and we will get back to you within 1 business day.
(386) 284-1782Daytona Beach is a city of about 69,000 people in Volusia County, built around two identities that coexist year-round: the Atlantic beach and the Daytona International Speedway. The beachside barrier island runs along the Atlantic coast east of the Halifax River, where homes face salt air and ocean wind every day of the year. The mainland side of the city - west of the Halifax River and US-1 - includes older residential neighborhoods like Midtown and a mix of postwar concrete block homes, commercial corridors, and the institutional anchors of Halifax Health and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. The housing stock spans from modest 1950s ranch homes to larger owner-occupied properties in quieter neighborhoods south of International Speedway Boulevard.
For sunroom and enclosure work, Daytona Beach presents a distinct set of conditions compared to its neighbors. Beachside homes need salt-resistant materials and more frequent maintenance. Inland homes tend to be older concrete block structures where aging outdoor rooms are common. The city's large retiree and long-term homeowner population - Volusia County has one of the highest concentrations of residents aged 65 and older in Florida - means many homeowners are updating outdoor spaces they have lived with for decades. We are also familiar with nearby Holly Hill to the north and South Daytona to the south, where the building stock and permit conditions are closely related to what you find throughout Daytona Beach.
Enjoy your sunroom year-round with climate-controlled four season designs.
Learn MoreAffordable three season rooms that bring the outdoors inside comfortably.
Learn MoreKeep bugs out and breezes in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreTurn your deck into a fully enclosed sunroom and reclaim the space.
Learn MoreGlass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and shelter for outdoor living.
Learn MoreCall us or request a free estimate online - we respond within 1 business day and serve all of Daytona Beach, FL.