
Port Orange Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is the sunroom contractor Flagler Beach homeowners call for sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen room installations built to handle salt air and coastal wind. We have served Flagler Beach and Flagler County since 2020 and respond to every new inquiry within one business day.
Flagler Beach homes built near the water benefit most from a fully enclosed sunroom addition that keeps salt air and storm rain out while letting in light year-round. Learn more about our sunroom additions and how we build them for coastal conditions.
Many Flagler Beach homes have existing concrete patios that sit unused for half the year because of afternoon sun, rain, or mosquitoes. An aluminum-framed patio enclosure built with coastal-grade materials turns that outdoor slab into a usable room without requiring a full foundation pour.
The original screen enclosures on many 1970s and 1980s Flagler Beach homes are past their service life - frames have oxidized and screen mesh has pulled loose from cracked spline tracks. We remove and replace deteriorated enclosures with corrosion-resistant aluminum framing and new no-see-um or standard mesh.
A three season sunroom works well in Flagler Beach because mild winters mean homeowners can use the space from October through April without needing full HVAC. Screened or vented panels allow airflow during cooler months and can be converted to glass panels if you want year-round climate control later.
Vinyl frames are a practical choice for Flagler Beach properties because they do not corrode, they require almost no maintenance, and they hold up well in a salt-air environment. For homeowners who want a finished interior look without the upkeep that painted aluminum demands near the coast, vinyl is a strong option.
A covered patio gives Flagler Beach homeowners a first layer of protection from afternoon sun and summer thunderstorms without committing to a fully enclosed room. Aluminum patio covers can be spec'd with wind-rated fasteners to meet Flagler County's coastal wind requirements and can be screened in later if your needs change.
Flagler Beach sits directly on the Atlantic coast, and the salt air here is not subtle. Within a few blocks of the ocean or the Intracoastal Waterway, metal fasteners corrode, paint and caulk break down, and aluminum frames oxidize faster than any manufacturer's warranty assumes. A large share of the housing stock was built in the 1970s and 1980s, which means many original screen enclosures and Florida rooms are now well past their expected lifespan. When the frame, the mesh, and the slab are all showing wear at the same time, patching individual pieces rarely makes financial sense.
The soil underneath Flagler Beach homes is predominantly sandy, which means concrete slabs can shift and settle over time, especially in areas near the Intracoastal where storm surge and heavy rain put additional stress on drainage. Some properties also fall within FEMA flood zones, which adds requirements to the permitting process for any structural addition. Hurricane Nicole made direct landfall near Flagler Beach in November 2022, and a number of homeowners discovered hidden water intrusion damage in the months afterward. Any sunroom or enclosure project here needs to be built to current Florida wind-load standards and permitted through the City of Flagler Beach before work begins.
Our crew works throughout Flagler Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The homes on the ocean side of A1A require a different material spec than homes two or three miles inland - what holds up fine in Port Orange or Ormond Beach will show corrosion within a few years on a property steps from the Atlantic. We baseline every Flagler Beach job with marine-grade aluminum, stainless or hot-dipped galvanized fasteners, and glass or panel ratings that meet the coastal wind zone requirements for this part of Flagler County.
Flagler Beach is a small, tightly settled town. The Flagler Beach Pier at the center of town is the landmark most locals use to orient themselves, and whether your home is near the pier, down toward Gamble Rogers Memorial State Recreation Area, or on the west side of the Intracoastal, we have worked in neighborhoods throughout the city. A1A is the main artery, and most residential streets branch off it toward both the ocean and the waterway.
We also serve neighboring communities along this stretch of the coast. If you have family or neighbors in New Smyrna Beach or inland toward Palm Coast, we cover those areas as well.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will respond within one business day. We ask a few questions about your home and what you're hoping to build so we can arrive at your estimate prepared.
We visit your Flagler Beach property, measure the space, check the slab and attachment points, and assess the flood zone status and coastal exposure level. This is where we confirm material specs and give you a fixed-price quote - no surprises after work begins.
We file the permit with the City of Flagler Beach and schedule construction to begin once approval is issued - typically two to four weeks after submission. Construction itself takes two to four weeks depending on scope and complexity.
We schedule and pass the final city inspection, then walk you through the completed space. You receive all permit documentation, which your homeowners insurer and any future buyer will need.
We build for the coast - corrosion-resistant materials, proper permits, and construction that meets Flagler County wind-load standards. Call us or send a message and we will respond within one business day.
(386) 284-1782Flagler Beach is a small coastal city of roughly 5,000 residents on Florida's northeast Atlantic coast, sitting in Flagler County, one of the fastest-growing counties in the country. The city has deliberately stayed small and residential - there are no high-rise developments, and most of the housing stock is single-family homes built from the 1970s through the 1990s. State Road A1A runs along the ocean through the center of town, with homes and small businesses lining both sides. Lots are generally modest in size - narrow beach-town footprints where homes sit close to the street and to each other.
The Flagler Beach Pier is the landmark most residents know best, and Gamble Rogers Memorial State Recreation Area borders the city to the south. Many homeowners here are retirees or people who moved from the Northeast specifically to slow down in a town that still feels like coastal Florida used to. The west side of A1A faces the Intracoastal Waterway, and those properties deal with a different kind of moisture exposure than the ocean-side homes but are still firmly in salt-air territory. Neighboring communities include Palm Coast to the north and Ormond Beach further south.
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 MoreWe build for coastal conditions. Call us or submit a request and we will get back to you within one business day.