
Your porch sits empty in August. An all season room changes that - climate-controlled, storm-rated, and built to work year-round in Fort Pierce.

All season rooms in Fort Pierce are fully enclosed additions with insulated walls, real windows, and a dedicated cooling system - most builds run four to ten weeks from permit approval to final walkthrough, depending on size and whether a new slab is needed.
Unlike a basic screened porch that becomes unusable from May through October, an all season room stays comfortable when the heat index pushes past 100 degrees. If you have been thinking about adding livable square footage without a full home addition, an all season room is often the most practical path. Many homeowners also consider a enclosed patio room when they already have a concrete slab to build on, which can reduce both cost and construction time.
Fort Pierce's coastal climate - the heat, the humidity, the salt air, and the hurricane season - makes material selection and permitting more important here than in almost any other part of the country. Every project we build goes through St. Lucie County's full permit and inspection process, so your new room is documented, insurable, and built to last.
If you walk past your screened porch every day from May through October without stepping into it, the space is not working. Fort Pierce summers regularly push the heat index above 100 degrees, and a space without climate control is unusable for nearly half the year. An all season room solves this with a properly cooled, sealed enclosure you can enjoy every day.
Fort Pierce averages about 55 inches of rain per year, with afternoon thunderstorms arriving almost daily from June through September. If rain forces you inside every afternoon and closes off your outdoor space for hours, an all season room gives you a place that stays dry regardless of what is happening outside. You get the light and the view without the weather dictating your schedule.
Water stains on the ceiling after heavy rain, visible mold on window frames, or drafts coming through the glass when it is windy are all signs that an existing structure was not built to the standard Fort Pierce's coastal conditions demand. These problems tend to get worse over time and can eventually affect the walls and flooring of your main home.
If your family has outgrown your living space but a full room addition feels like too large a project, an all season room is often a faster and less disruptive way to add a functional room. In many cases it can be built on an existing patio slab, which reduces both cost and construction time compared to starting from the ground up.
Every all season room we build starts with a site visit and a real conversation about how you plan to use the space. From there, you choose the level of finish that fits your budget and your goals. Homeowners who want a true living space year-round often opt for fully insulated walls and a ductless mini-split cooling system. Those who want something closer to a traditional sunroom may prefer a four season sunroom configuration with operable windows and a lighter enclosure.
If you are starting with an open patio, we can build the foundation and frame the room from scratch. If you already have a screened enclosure or an older porch structure, we can often work with what is already there, which can save meaningful money. Projects with an existing slab typically come in at the lower end of the cost range. For homeowners who want maximum design control over the layout, materials, and features, we also offer fully custom builds - take a look at our enclosed patio rooms page for more on that option.
Suits homeowners who want a true climate-controlled living space they can use every day of the year, regardless of Fort Pierce heat, rain, or storms.
Suits homeowners with an older screened porch or lanai who want to enclose, insulate, and condition the space without paying for a full new build.
Suits homeowners with an open concrete patio who want to build a new enclosed room on top of the existing slab, keeping foundation costs low.
Suits homeowners who want a bright, glass-forward space with operable windows and a lighter enclosure, connected to the home's existing HVAC.
Fort Pierce sits less than two miles from the Atlantic Ocean, and that proximity shapes every building decision. The salt air that makes the Treasure Coast beautiful also accelerates the breakdown of window frames, hardware, and exterior seals far faster than you would see in an inland city. That is why we specify vinyl or marine-grade aluminum framing on every project we build here - materials chosen for this environment, not just for appearance. For homeowners in Port St. Lucie, FL and surrounding areas, the same coastal conditions apply across the region.
St. Lucie County's permitting and inspection process adds time to any project - typically two to four weeks before a single nail is driven - but it is also what makes your new room insurable and sale-ready. Many Fort Pierce neighborhoods, particularly in planned communities along the Indian River, also require HOA architectural approval as a separate step. We work with homeowners throughout the area, including those in Jensen Beach, FL, where the same coastal building standards and HOA review processes are the norm. Understanding both the county process and the HOA landscape is part of what we bring to every project.
We respond within one business day. We will ask about your space, whether you have an existing slab or porch, and what you are hoping to use the room for - not to sell you something, but to figure out what your project actually involves before we come out.
We come to your home, take measurements, and walk through your options. You will leave with a written estimate that breaks down what you are paying for - not just a total number - and a clear picture of what the finished room will look like.
We handle the St. Lucie County permit application and schedule all required inspections. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we provide the drawings you need for your submission. Permit review typically takes two to four weeks - plan for it, and do not let anyone start work before it is in hand.
Foundation prep or slab work comes first, then framing, windows, roofing, and systems. County inspections happen at required milestones during the build. When the work is done, we walk through the finished room with you, demonstrate how everything operates, and hand you all permit and warranty documents.
We come to your home, measure the space, and give you a written estimate - no obligation, no pressure.
(772) 227-1693Every all season room we build uses framing and hardware selected for Fort Pierce's salt-air environment. Vinyl and marine-grade aluminum hold up far better here than standard materials, and we specify them on every project regardless of how far the home is from the water.
We pull every permit, schedule every inspection, and hand you the final sign-off documents when the job is done. A permitted room shows up correctly on your property record and is insurable - an unpermitted one is a liability that can surface at the worst possible time.
Fort Pierce's coastal wind zone requires impact-rated glass on any enclosed addition. We use compliant glazing on every build as a baseline - not as an upgrade - because it is what the code requires and what this environment demands. Learn more about Florida's wind-load requirements at the Florida Building Commission.
We respond to every inquiry within one business day. When we come to your home, you get a written, itemized estimate - not a ballpark number that doubles by the time you sign. You know what you are paying for before any work begins.
Building in Fort Pierce means understanding the county process, the coastal material requirements, and the HOA landscape that comes with many local neighborhoods. Every one of those details is factored into how we quote and build your project.
For the latest permit requirements, visit St. Lucie County Building and Code Regulation. For cooling system guidance, see the U.S. Department of Energy - Ductless Mini-Split Systems.
Convert your open lanai or existing screened structure into a fully enclosed, finished room - often at lower cost when a concrete slab is already in place.
Learn MoreA glass-forward year-round sunroom with operable windows and a lighter enclosure, connecting naturally to your home's existing heating and cooling.
Learn MoreHurricane season fills contractor schedules fast - reach out now and we will get your permit process started before the calendar books up.