Port Orange Lanai Sunrooms & Patios serves South Daytona as a sunroom contractor specializing in sunroom construction, patio enclosures, and screen room installations on the concrete block homes common to this Halifax River corridor community. We reply within one business day and pull permits through the City of South Daytona on every project.

South Daytona's compact lots and concrete block homes from the 1950s through 1980s often have bare back patios that sit unused during the long humid summer. Our sunroom construction process starts from the existing slab where possible, cutting build time and keeping the project within reach for most South Daytona homeowners.
South Daytona sits right along the Halifax River, and low-lying yards here can collect standing water after summer thunderstorms. A properly framed patio enclosure raises your outdoor space out of the flood-prone zone while giving you a protected area that holds up to Volusia County's hurricane season winds.
Living this close to the Halifax River means mosquito and no-see-um pressure that runs from April through November. A screen room with UV-resistant aluminum framing and fine-mesh screening gives you an outdoor space you can actually sit in during the humid South Daytona evenings without fighting off insects.
South Daytona is a city where many homeowners have lived in the same house for 20 or 30 years and want more space without moving. A sunroom addition on an existing concrete slab is one of the most cost-effective ways to gain a new room in a modest ranch home without a full interior renovation.
Many South Daytona homes have older aluminum Florida rooms from the 1970s and 1980s where the frames have started to corrode and the panels let in drafts. We replace those aging structures with modern materials better suited to the year-round humidity and occasional salt air this city experiences.
For South Daytona homeowners who want low upkeep, vinyl-framed sunrooms resist the humidity and UV exposure common in this stretch of Volusia County. They do not rust, do not need repainting, and hold up well in the moist coastal environment along the Halifax River corridor.
South Daytona covers just three square miles between Daytona Beach and Port Orange, and most of its homes were built between the 1950s and 1980s using concrete block construction. These homes are now 40 to 70 years old, and the original screened porches and aluminum Florida rooms from that era are corroding, drafty, and often no longer built to the standards Florida now requires. The Halifax River running along the western edge of the city means many properties here sit on low-lying, moisture-rich ground. Homes near the river see elevated humidity levels year-round, which accelerates frame corrosion and drives mold into any gap in a structure's envelope.
Florida's building code requires sunrooms and patio enclosures to meet hurricane wind-load standards, and South Daytona's location in Volusia County puts it in the path of tropical weather every fall. A sunroom that cannot pass a city inspection is not just a code problem - it is a structural risk when a storm arrives. South Daytona's sandy coastal soil also shifts and settles over time, particularly in low-lying areas near the river, which means slabs crack and become unlevel. A contractor who has worked on these properties regularly knows to assess the existing foundation before building anything new on top of it.
Our crew works throughout South Daytona regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We are familiar with the City of South Daytona's permitting process and know what reviewers typically look for on patio enclosure and sunroom addition projects in this city.
South Daytona runs along US-1, which cuts right through the middle of town. Most of the residential neighborhoods here are on small lots with single-story concrete block ranch homes - the kind of postwar Florida construction that is tough to the elements but now old enough to need real updating on the outdoor structures. Properties near the Halifax River, particularly in the streets west of US-1, sit on flatter, lower ground where we regularly see slabs with settlement issues before we start framing anything new. We also serve neighboring Daytona Beach regularly, and the construction conditions in that city are similar to what we encounter on South Daytona jobs.
For homeowners in the neighborhoods near the Daytona International Speedway just to the north, or in the quieter streets that run toward Port Orange to the south, we know this stretch of Volusia County well enough to get to your site and start work without wasting time figuring out where you are.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and tell us what you have in mind. We reply to every South Daytona inquiry within one business day.
We visit your home, look at the existing slab and structure, and give you a written itemized quote before any work begins. You'll know the full cost - no surprises after you sign.
We handle the permit application through the City of South Daytona and schedule construction once the review is approved. You do not need to manage the permitting process yourself.
When construction is complete, we walk through the finished room with you, confirm it passes the city inspection, and answer any questions before we leave.
We serve South Daytona homeowners and reply within one business day. No pressure, no obligation - just a straight answer about what your project will involve.
(386) 284-1782South Daytona is a small, compact city of about 13,000 people covering roughly three square miles on the southern edge of the Daytona Beach metro area. It sits between the city of Daytona Beach to the north and Port Orange to the south, with the Halifax River - a tidal lagoon connected to the Intracoastal Waterway - forming its western boundary. Most of the residential streets here are lined with single-story concrete block ranch homes built between the 1950s and 1980s, reflecting the city's growth as a bedroom community for Daytona Beach during the postwar decades. Homeownership rates here are around 60 percent, and many residents have lived in the same home for 20 years or more.
The city is part of the broader Deltona-Daytona Beach-Ormond Beach metro area, and many South Daytona residents commute along US-1 or I-95 to jobs in Daytona Beach or Port Orange. Neighbors to the south in Port Orange share similar housing stock and the same coastal Florida building conditions. For sunroom and patio enclosure work, South Daytona's combination of aging mid-century homes, humid riverfront setting, and Florida hurricane exposure means this is not the kind of project where you want a crew that has never worked in this specific environment.
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 today or submit a request online - we serve South Daytona homeowners and reply within one business day. The sooner you call, the sooner you can enjoy a new enclosed space.