Port Orange Lanai Sunrooms & Patios is Port Orange's sunroom contractor for sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen room installations. We have served Port Orange homeowners since 2020 and pull permits directly through the Port Orange Building Division on every project.

Port Orange homes built during the 1970s through 1990s growth boom often have underused back yards and aging screened lanais. A new sunroom addition turns that dead space into a climate-controlled room your family actually uses, designed to meet Volusia County permit and Florida wind-load requirements from the ground up.
Port Orange summers run from May through October with temperatures in the low 90s and high humidity - a screened porch is comfortable for only a few months a year. A four season sunroom with proper insulation and low-e glass keeps the room livable even when the afternoon heat index climbs past 100 degrees.
Many Port Orange patios sit on existing concrete slabs that are in good shape structurally but offer no protection from afternoon thunderstorms or the no-see-ums that come out at dusk near the waterways. A properly sealed patio enclosure gives you a protected outdoor room without starting from scratch.
Port Orange is positioned near the Halifax River and surrounding wetlands where mosquitoes and biting insects are active for most of the year. A professionally installed screen room lets you enjoy the breeze and the view without the bugs, and it holds up to the UV exposure and wind gusts that eat through cheap DIY screening.
A lot of Port Orange homes from the 1980s and 1990s came with Florida rooms that are now showing their age - corroding aluminum frames, fogged glass, and drafts that make the space unusable. We update those older rooms with modern materials and improved sealing so the space works the way it was supposed to.
Port Orange lots vary significantly - from narrow lots near US-1 to generous back yards in the subdivisions further west. We design each custom sunroom around your specific lot dimensions, existing roofline, and HOA architectural guidelines so the finished room looks like it was always part of the house.
Port Orange grew rapidly from the 1970s through the late 1990s, and a large share of homes here were built during that window. That means a lot of the concrete block ranch homes along Dunlawton Avenue and throughout the city's subdivisions are now 30 to 50 years old. Original screened enclosures and Florida rooms from that era are reaching the end of their useful life - frames corrode, screens tear, and slab foundations can develop cracks as Port Orange's sandy coastal soil shifts over time. Homeowners in this age bracket of homes are often choosing between patching what they have and replacing it with something built to current Florida standards.
Florida's building code requires sunrooms and patio enclosures to meet specific hurricane wind-load standards, because Volusia County sits on the central Atlantic coast and has been affected by storms including Hurricane Ian in 2022. The materials and framing methods that meet those standards are more expensive than what a basic home improvement store sells, but they are the only acceptable option for permitted work in this county. Homeowners near the Halifax River and low-lying areas also need to factor in soil conditions and drainage when planning a new slab or extending an existing foundation - problems that a contractor who works here regularly will have seen before and knows how to handle.
We pull permits directly through the Port Orange Building Division, which handles permits within city limits separately from the county office. Knowing which office to work with, what their current review timelines look like, and what the inspectors typically flag during rough-in and final inspections cuts days off a project that could otherwise stall at the permit stage.
Port Orange is a city that most people navigate by Dunlawton Avenue - the main east-west corridor connecting US-1 to the beach. Homes closer to the water, such as those in the neighborhoods near the Halifax River causeway, sit on lower-lying lots where drainage planning matters more than it does in the higher subdivisions further west. The Spruce Creek area is one of the city's best-known communities, and many of those homes sit in an HOA that has specific architectural review requirements we are already familiar with.
We also serve homeowners in nearby South Daytona and regularly cross paths with the same permit offices and building conditions you find throughout this part of Volusia County. If you are in Port Orange or any of these surrounding communities, the process we follow is the same and the crew is the same.
Reach us by phone or the contact form and we will get back to you within 1 business day. You do not need drawings or a fixed budget to start - just a general idea of what you want to do with the space.
We visit your property, assess your existing slab or foundation, and discuss what type of enclosure fits your lot, budget, and HOA requirements. This is the step where we talk through cost ranges honestly - no pressure, no vague numbers.
We handle the permit application with the Port Orange Building Division and schedule work to start once approval is in hand. Construction on a standard enclosure typically runs one to four weeks, and you do not need to be home the whole time.
The county inspector signs off on the finished work, and we walk through the completed room with you before we consider the job done. If anything needs adjustment, we handle it before leaving the site.
We serve Port Orange homeowners from the older neighborhoods near US-1 to the newer subdivisions west of Williamson Boulevard. Call us or fill out the form and we will get back to you within 1 business day.
(386) 284-1782Port Orange is a city of roughly 65,000 people in Volusia County, sitting directly south of Daytona Beach along the Halifax River. It is one of the most residential communities in the county - the majority of residents own their homes, and the city has a reputation as a quieter alternative to its more tourist-heavy neighbor. The housing stock is a mix of single-story concrete block ranch homes from the 1970s through 1990s, scattered across dozens of named subdivisions that range from older streets near US-1 to newer developments on the western edges of the city. The Spruce Creek area is one of the city's most recognized communities, known across Volusia County for the private airpark where some residents park planes in hangars attached to their homes.
For sunroom and patio enclosure work, Port Orange's residential character and high rate of home ownership make it one of the busiest markets we work in. Homeowners here tend to stay for a long time and invest in their properties. Many are looking at aging outdoor structures that were built when the city was young and are now overdue for an upgrade. We are also familiar with the neighboring communities of Daytona Beach and South Daytona, and the building conditions you find in Port Orange are very similar across all three communities.
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Learn MoreCall us or request a free estimate online - we respond within 1 business day and serve all of Port Orange, FL.