
Port Orange Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is the sunroom contractor Orange City homeowners call for enclosed patio rooms, screen room installations, and sunroom additions on the concrete block ranch homes that make up most of this city's housing stock. We have served Orange City and the surrounding Volusia County communities since 2020 and respond to every new inquiry within one business day.
Many Orange City homes have an existing concrete patio slab that sits open to the afternoon heat and summer thunderstorms for months each year. An enclosed patio room built over that existing slab turns unused outdoor space into a protected room without a full foundation pour. Learn more about our enclosed patio rooms and the options available for Orange City homes.
Orange City's afternoon thunderstorms and mosquito season make a properly screened outdoor room a practical upgrade, not just a luxury. Many older CBS ranch homes in the city have existing screened porches with oxidized frames or torn mesh that has been patched multiple times - a full screen room replacement is often more cost-effective than continued repairs.
Orange City's single-story ranch homes typically have a rear patio slab that extends off the main living area - a common footprint that works well for an aluminum-framed patio enclosure. We assess the existing slab condition and attachment points before quoting, because settling in Orange City's sandy soil is common and needs to be factored into the design.
For Orange City homeowners who want a fully climate-controlled bonus room rather than a screened or glass-paneled enclosure, a sunroom addition with insulated walls and a dedicated HVAC connection is the right direction. Concrete block homes in this city attach well to new sunroom framing when the connection point is correctly prepared and permitted.
Orange City's mild winters - with comfortable temperatures from October through April most years - make a three season sunroom a practical option for homeowners who want more outdoor living space without the cost of full climate control. Screened or vented panels keep bugs and rain out while allowing airflow during the cooler months of the year.
Some Orange City homeowners start with a screened patio and later want to convert it into a fully enclosed sunroom with glass panels and climate control. We handle that conversion without demolishing the existing frame when the structure is sound, keeping the project cost lower than a ground-up build while achieving the same finished result.
Most homes in Orange City were built between the 1970s and the early 2000s using concrete block construction - the standard Florida method from that era. CBS homes are durable, but after 30 to 50 years the stucco exterior develops hairline cracks around window and door frames, and the original aluminum screen enclosures from that period are now past their practical lifespan. When a homeowner in Orange City calls about a sunroom or patio enclosure project, we almost always find that the attachment points on the existing structure need to be assessed and sometimes reinforced before new framing goes up.
The soil beneath Orange City is predominantly sandy, which drains well in most conditions but can shift under concrete slabs over time - particularly near low-lying areas close to the St. Johns River floodplain. Summer afternoon thunderstorms bring heavy rain almost every day from June through September, and that repeated wet-dry cycling is one of the main reasons screen enclosure frames and slab edges crack. Any addition or enclosure project in Orange City needs a permit through the City of Orange City and a material spec that accounts for Central Florida's UV exposure and humidity.
Our crew works throughout Orange City regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The single-story CBS ranch homes that make up most of the city's housing stock are a known quantity for us - we know where the common moisture issues show up on homes of this age, how the framing attachment points typically look on a 1980s CBS build, and what slab condition to expect in an area with sandy, occasionally shifting soil. We pull permits through the City of Orange City Building Department on every project.
Orange City is a compact city west of DeLand, with Saxon Boulevard as the main north-south artery and Blue Spring State Park bordering the city to the west along the St. Johns River. Most residential neighborhoods branch off the main roads in a fairly tight grid, and homes here tend to sit on quarter-acre or smaller lots with mature trees that have had decades to grow. Those trees add character but also put debris on roofs and in gutters after every summer storm.
We serve communities all around Orange City. Homeowners in Port Orange and DeLand work with us regularly, and we are comfortable across all of the surrounding Volusia County communities.
Call or submit a contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. Let us know roughly what you're hoping to build - patio enclosure, screen room, sunroom - and we'll set up a time to come see the space.
We visit your Orange City home, measure the space, check the slab and stucco attachment points, and confirm the scope. You receive a fixed-price quote before we start anything - no vague estimates that grow after the contract is signed.
We file the building permit with the City of Orange City and schedule construction to begin once it is approved - typically two to three weeks after submission. Construction itself takes two to three weeks for most enclosed patio room and screen room projects.
We schedule and pass the final city inspection, then walk you through the completed room. You receive all permit and inspection records, which your homeowners insurer and any future buyer will want to see.
We serve Orange City with the same fixed-price approach and permit handling we use throughout Volusia County. Call or send a message and we will respond within one business day.
(386) 284-1782Orange City is a small city of roughly 12,000 to 13,000 residents in western Volusia County, sitting just west of DeLand and north of Deltona. The city has a notably older population - many residents are retirees who chose Orange City specifically for its quieter character and proximity to Blue Spring State Park on the St. Johns River. Most of the housing stock consists of single-story concrete block ranch homes built between the 1970s and the early 2000s, with a mix of site-built homes and a smaller number of manufactured homes in some neighborhoods. Lot sizes are generally modest, and mature oak trees and palms shade many residential streets.
Blue Spring State Park, just west of town on the St. Johns River, is the best-known landmark in Orange City - it draws visitors from across Florida each winter to see the manatees that gather in the spring's warm water. Saxon Boulevard is the main commercial corridor through town, connecting Orange City to DeLand to the east and to I-4 access routes to the south. For sunroom and patio enclosure work, the city's homes are well-suited to the kind of projects we build - the CBS construction is solid, the lots have usable rear patios, and the mild winters make an outdoor-adjacent room genuinely useful for most of the year. We also serve neighboring communities including Deltona and DeLand.
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 cover Orange City and all of Volusia County. Call or submit a request and we will be back to you within one business day.