
North Palm Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios serves Juno Beach homeowners with all season rooms, screen enclosures, and sunroom additions built for this barrier island's salt air, hurricane exposure, and tight coastal lots. We have served the Palm Beach County coast since 2017 and reply within one business day.

Juno Beach homeowners face salt air year-round and hurricane-season wind loads that demand fully engineered construction - exactly what an all season room provides. Our all season rooms are insulated, climate-controlled, and built to Florida's high-wind standards, so the room stays cool in summer, comfortable in winter, and sealed tight when a storm rolls in off the Atlantic.
Juno Beach's narrow lots and compact outdoor spaces make screen rooms one of the most practical ways to expand usable space without a large footprint. A well-built screen room lets in the ocean breeze while keeping out the insects and sand that barrier island living brings through open windows in the evening.
Many Juno Beach homes from the 1960s and 1970s have basic screened porches or open patios that are unusable for most of the year. A glass-enclosed, climate-controlled sunroom addition converts that space into a room you can sit in every morning regardless of the season or the weather offshore.
Juno Beach condominiums and single-family homes alike have outdoor slabs and small patios that go unused during the wet season. Enclosing these spaces with screen or glass panels makes them functional without requiring a large addition - a practical fit for the compact lot sizes common on this barrier island.
For Juno Beach homeowners who want the light and feel of being outdoors without compromising on comfort, a four season sunroom with high-performance glazing and a mini-split cooling unit delivers that experience every day of the year - even in the heart of South Florida's humid summer.
A solid patio cover is often the first step for Juno Beach homeowners who want shade and rain protection without fully enclosing a space. Covers designed for coastal conditions use corrosion-resistant frames and fastenings that hold up against the salt air surrounding every property on this island.
Juno Beach sits on a narrow barrier island in Palm Beach County with the Atlantic Ocean to the east and the Intracoastal Waterway to the west. The town covers less than 2 square miles of land, and nearly every property is within a short distance of open salt water on at least one side. That geography shapes what any outdoor addition needs to be built from. Standard aluminum frames without a protective finish, uncoated steel fasteners, and unsealed connections all corrode faster here than anywhere a mile or two inland. A sunroom that looks fine at installation can show oxidation, pitting, and seal failure within a few years if the contractor used materials suited to a less demanding environment.
Juno Beach's residential stock was built mostly between the 1950s and the 1980s, leaving a large share of homes that are 40 to 70 years old. Many have older screened porches, basic concrete patios, or open lanais that were never built to today's wind-load standards. Palm Beach County sits in a high-wind zone, and Florida's building code requires that any permanent addition - including sunrooms, screen rooms, and patio enclosures - be engineered for the local wind environment. The town's sandy, well-drained barrier island soil also means footings and slab connections need to account for less stable ground than you find on inland lots with more consolidated soil.
Our crew works throughout Juno Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Most of the properties we build on in town are single-family concrete block homes or condo buildings from the mid-20th century - a construction type we know well from decades of work across coastal Palm Beach County. We pull permits through Juno Beach's building department and are familiar with the town's review process and the specific wind-load requirements that apply to this part of the barrier island coast.
Getting around Juno Beach means using U.S. Route 1 (Federal Highway) as the main north-south corridor. Ocean Drive runs parallel along the beachside. Whether a property sits near the Loggerhead Marinelife Center on the oceanfront or farther back toward U.S. 1, the salt-air exposure is real across the entire town - and we factor that into every material choice and connection detail. Florida Power and Light's headquarters campus on U.S. 1 is a familiar landmark for anyone who has worked in this area.
We also serve homeowners in nearby communities. If you are in Jupiter to the north, or in Palm Beach Gardens to the south, we cover both areas and understand how local conditions differ across this stretch of the Palm Beach County coast.
Call or use our contact form and we will respond within one business day. We schedule an in-home visit that works with your calendar - no commitment required at this stage, just a conversation about what you want.
We visit your Juno Beach property, assess the space, check the existing structure for any issues, and discuss material choices suited to this barrier island environment. You receive a written estimate covering scope, materials, and timeline before any work is authorized.
We handle the permit application and manage the review process with the Juno Beach building department. Permit review typically adds a few weeks before construction begins - we keep you updated and handle any back-and-forth with the town so you do not have to.
Construction proceeds once approvals are in hand. After the final inspection passes, we walk through the completed space with you, demonstrate all features, and address any punch-list items. You receive copies of all permit and inspection records for your files.
We know this barrier island and use materials that hold up in the salt air. No pressure, no obligation - just a straight conversation about what your home needs.
(561) 356-8563Juno Beach is a small barrier island town in northern Palm Beach County, covering less than 2 square miles with a population of around 4,000 residents. The town sits between Jupiter Inlet to the north and Lake Worth Inlet to the south, with the Atlantic Ocean on the east and the Intracoastal Waterway on the west. Most households are small - often one or two people - and the town has a strongly owner-occupied character with many long-term residents. The oceanfront is home to the Loggerhead Marinelife Center, a sea turtle research facility on one of the densest sea turtle nesting beaches in the world. The Juno Beach Pier, rebuilt in 1999, is a well-known local landmark along the Atlantic coast.
Housing in Juno Beach ranges from oceanfront and Intracoastal-front condominiums - many of them mid-rise buildings from the 1960s and 1970s - to smaller single-family homes on compact lots closer to U.S. 1. Florida Power and Light's corporate headquarters campus is the town's most prominent employer and a well-known landmark along the Federal Highway corridor. Homeowners in Tequesta and North Palm Beach share many of the same coastal building demands as Juno Beach - salt air, high wind loads, and concrete block homes that have been through decades of South Florida weather.
Expert construction delivering durable, code-compliant sunroom builds.
Learn MoreKeep bugs out and breezes in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your patio into an enclosed, weather-protected sunroom.
Learn MoreTurn your existing deck into a stylish, fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers providing shade and weather protection outdoors.
Learn MoreOur schedule fills quickly before the fall and winter season - contact us now to reserve your spot and get your project moving.