Port Orange Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is a sunroom contractor serving Deltona with all season rooms, sunroom additions, and patio enclosures designed for the concrete block homes built throughout this Volusia County city from the 1970s through the 1990s. We pull permits through the City of Deltona Building Division on every project and reply to all inquiries within one business day.

Deltona's long, humid summers mean a basic screen enclosure is only usable comfortably for a few months of the year - an all season room with insulated panels and climate control extends that to twelve months. Our all season rooms are built on the concrete block exterior walls common throughout the original Deltona Lakes neighborhoods, giving the addition framing a solid anchor point that wood-frame homes cannot match.
Deltona's high rate of owner-occupied homes means homeowners here tend to stay in their houses for years - a sunroom addition gives a long-term owner a new room without moving and without a full interior renovation. The concrete block construction standard in this city makes it straightforward to anchor new addition framing to the existing structure.
Many Deltona homes from the original 1970s-to-1990s build-out have a rear patio slab that has never been enclosed - or had a screen enclosure that has reached the end of its useful life. Replacing or upgrading to a solid-panel patio enclosure blocks Deltona's daily summer thunderstorm rain from blowing into the back of the house.
Mosquitoes are a real concern near Deltona's many lakes, including Lake Monroe on the city's southern edge, and a screened outdoor room is one of the most practical ways to enjoy the backyard without constant insect pressure from spring through fall. Screen rooms are also the most cost-effective first step for Deltona homeowners who want to improve their outdoor space on a defined budget.
For Deltona homeowners who want a climate-controlled room they can use every day of the year - not just on the mild days - a four season sunroom with low-e glass, insulated panels, and a ductless mini-split delivers that. Deltona is far enough inland that it misses the worst coastal salt air, so standard aluminum framing performs well without needing marine-grade upgrades that coastal jobs require.
The original rear patio slabs on Deltona's 1970s-to-1990s homes often show cracking and settlement as the sandy soil beneath them shifts over the decades. A patio-to-sunroom conversion starts with a slab assessment - we check for level, cracks, and anchor point condition before any framing goes up - because building on a compromised slab creates problems that show up within a few years.
Deltona was developed as a planned community starting in the 1960s by General Development Corporation, and the bulk of the city's housing stock was built between the 1970s and 1990s. That means most homes here are now 30 to 55 years old - an age range where original roofing, insulation, HVAC systems, and patio enclosures are reaching or past the end of their useful life all at once. The standard construction method throughout Deltona is concrete block - CBS construction with stucco exteriors - and while that building method holds up well against Florida's heat and wind, it develops its own issues at this age: stucco cracks that let moisture in, window and door frames that have dried out and separated, and slab foundations that have shifted as the sandy soil beneath them settled over decades. A contractor who understands CBS construction knows how to anchor new framing correctly to block walls and how to identify slab movement before it becomes a structural problem.
Deltona's Central Florida location means hot, humid summers with daily afternoon thunderstorms from June through September, and a meaningful hurricane and tropical storm risk even though the city sits roughly 25 miles from the coast. Volusia County has seen storm impacts from hurricanes including Ian in 2022 and Irma in 2017, and any enclosed structure built in Deltona must meet Florida Building Code wind-load requirements for this zone. Beyond storms, the summer heat and humidity mean that a sunroom or all season room without adequate glazing and climate control will be unusable for four or five months of the year - which defeats the purpose. Getting the glazing specification and HVAC sizing right for Deltona's climate is something that comes from working in this region, not just reading a spec sheet.
Our crew works throughout Deltona regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The homes in the original Deltona Lakes neighborhoods - the subdivisions that make up the core of the city - are concrete block ranch houses built on slab foundations, and we have assessed and anchored new enclosure framing to these structures many times. The City of Deltona Building Division's permit process is familiar to our team, and we handle plan submission and inspection scheduling on every job so the homeowner does not have to track it.
Deltona sits on Interstate 4 between Daytona Beach and Orlando, and the city's layout spreads across a large area of Volusia County. Major roads like Howland Boulevard, Doyle Road, and Saxon Boulevard run through the city's subdivisions, and we know the neighborhoods they serve - from the older streets near Lyonia Preserve to the newer subdivisions near Saxon Boulevard on the city's north end. Lake Monroe on the southern edge of the city is one of Deltona's most visible landmarks, and homes in that area sit on lots that were developed with a mix of older and newer housing stock.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring cities, including DeLand to the northeast and Edgewater to the east along the coast. If you are in Deltona and have a neighbor who has had work done nearby, there is a good chance we know the street.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and describe what you have in mind. We reply to every Deltona inquiry within one business day - you will not wait a week to hear back.
We visit your Deltona home to measure the space, assess the existing slab or foundation, and go over your options in person. The estimate includes a full breakdown so you know what the project costs before anything is signed - no surprises after the fact.
We handle permit submission to the City of Deltona Building Division and schedule inspections at each required stage. Construction begins once the permit is approved - plan review typically takes two to four weeks.
When construction is complete we schedule the final inspection with the city and walk through the finished space with you. You receive copies of all permit documentation, which you will need for your homeowners insurance update and any future sale.
We serve homeowners throughout Deltona and pull all permits through the City of Deltona Building Division on every project. Call or send a message and we will get back to you within one business day.
(386) 284-1782Deltona is one of the largest cities in Florida by population - around 100,000 residents - and it sits in Volusia County roughly halfway between Orlando and Daytona Beach along Interstate 4. The city grew out of a planned community called Deltona Lakes, developed by General Development Corporation starting in the 1960s, and most of its neighborhoods were built in distinct phases through the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. That history gives Deltona a consistency that is easy to recognize on the ground: block after block of concrete block ranch houses on modest lots, laid out in curving suburban streets. A high share of those homes are owner-occupied, which reflects Deltona's character as a working- and middle-class homeowner city rather than a transient or rental market. You can read more about the city's history and growth at the Deltona Wikipedia page.
Local landmarks include Lyonia Preserve, a 360-acre nature preserve inside the city that protects a rare Florida scrub habitat and is a well-known neighborhood green space for Deltona residents. Lake Monroe on the city's southern boundary is popular for fishing and boating and is one of the most visible natural features in the area. Newer subdivisions near Saxon Boulevard on the north end of the city mix in alongside the older core neighborhoods, giving Deltona a range of housing ages on the same street in some areas. For homeowners in nearby Orange City just to the south, we serve that community as well, and the housing conditions there share a lot with what we see regularly in Deltona.
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Learn MoreCall today or send a message - we serve all of Deltona and respond within one business day.