
Your screened porch sits empty half the year because of heat and bugs. We turn it into an enclosed room you actually use - fully permitted, coastal-grade materials, and built for Fort Pierce summers.

Sunroom remodeling in Fort Pierce typically means converting an existing screened porch or lanai into a fully enclosed room - new framing, windows, roofing, and HVAC connections - and most projects take two to six weeks of active construction once permits are in hand.
A lot of Fort Pierce homeowners reach a point where their screened porch just does not work anymore - it is too hot in summer, the screens are aging, and the space is going to waste. Sunroom remodeling solves that by turning what you already have into a room you can use year-round. If you are starting from scratch rather than upgrading an existing structure, our screen room installation service might be the better starting point.
If you walk out to your screened porch in July and immediately walk back inside, the space is not working. Fort Pierce's long, hot summers make an unenclosed porch unusable for months. Enclosing and air-conditioning it turns that dead space into a room you enjoy in August.
Many Fort Pierce homes have screened porches built in the 1970s or 1980s. Age, humidity, and salt air leave rust stains on the frame, soft wood at the base of walls, and screens that tear constantly. At some point patching it again is no longer the answer - a proper conversion makes more sense.
If you see water stains on the porch floor or feel drafts around window frames after a storm, the enclosure has stopped sealing properly. Fort Pierce gets heavy afternoon thunderstorms from June through September, and a leaky structure only gets worse season after season.
If your family has outgrown your indoor footprint but a full addition feels like too much disruption and cost, a sunroom remodel is often the right middle ground. It adds real usable square footage - a workspace, a reading room, an informal dining spot - without rebuilding your home.
Our most common sunroom remodeling project is converting an existing screened porch or lanai into an enclosed Florida room or four-season space. We handle everything - removing old screens and framing, installing new wall panels, energy-efficient windows rated for Florida's wind and heat requirements, a properly sealed roof, and connections to your home's electrical and HVAC systems. Every project is fully permitted through St. Lucie County. If you are looking for a complete design consultation before committing to construction, take a look at our sunroom design service, where we work through materials, layout, and room use before a single permit is filed.
For homeowners who want a bigger scope - a brand-new addition rather than a conversion of what is already there - our work overlaps with full screen room installation. We can also handle structural upgrades that bring older porch foundations and framing up to current building code before the new enclosure goes on top. Whatever your starting point, we put together a written scope and a realistic timeline before any work begins.
Best for homeowners who already have a screened enclosure and want to convert it into a fully enclosed, climate-controlled room.
Suited to Florida-style open lanais where the existing slab and partial framing can be kept and upgraded rather than replaced.
Ideal for homeowners with an older Florida room that needs new windows, updated insulation, and refreshed finishes throughout.
For homeowners who want to add entirely new enclosed square footage to the home where no outdoor structure currently exists.
Fort Pierce sits on the Treasure Coast with direct exposure to Atlantic salt air and a climate that runs hot and humid from May through October. A large share of the city's housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1980s, which means many homes already have screened porches or lanais that are aging out. Salt air corrodes the metal framing, humidity rots the wood base, and the enclosure stops doing its job. Remodeling those structures - rather than patching them indefinitely - is the practical choice, and it needs to be done with materials rated for the coastal environment. Any window, fastener, or framing component that would last decades inland can corrode noticeably faster in Fort Pierce if the wrong grade is used.
We serve homeowners across the Fort Pierce area and the surrounding Treasure Coast - including Port St. Lucie and Vero Beach. The permit and inspection process runs through St. Lucie County, and we handle all of that coordination on your behalf. Florida's statewide building code sets specific wind load standards for enclosed room additions in coastal counties, and every project we build meets those requirements - not just the minimum, but built to hold up through what the Treasure Coast actually experiences in a storm season.
We ask a few questions about what you are starting with and what you want to use the room for. You do not need all the answers ready - we reply within one business day and guide the conversation from there.
We visit your home, measure the space, and review the existing structure. You receive a written estimate broken down by category - materials, labor, permits, and any structural work needed - before anything is signed.
We submit the permit to St. Lucie County on your behalf. Approval typically takes one to four weeks. You do not call the building department - we track the status and keep you updated throughout.
Once permits are approved, we build. Florida requires inspections at set points during construction - we schedule all of them. When the final inspection passes, we walk the finished room with you and address any punch-list items before we close out the job.
Free estimate. No pressure. We handle the permits so you don't have to.
(772) 227-1693Salt air close to the Atlantic accelerates rust and corrosion on metal components that would last decades inland. We specify window frames, fasteners, and roofing hardware rated for coastal exposure - the Florida Sea Grant program documents the effect of coastal conditions on building materials. This is the difference between a sunroom that still looks right in ten years and one that starts showing its age after three.
We submit, track, and close out every permit with St. Lucie County. Florida requires inspections at specific stages of construction - not just at the end - and we schedule all of them. You never need to call the building department. A fully permitted sunroom protects your property value and your insurance coverage.
Fort Pierce sits in a coastal wind zone where building code sets higher structural standards than most of the country. Every window connection, roof attachment, and wall panel we install is built to those standards - the same ones that protect the rest of your home. A sunroom built to these requirements is one you can trust when a storm tracks up the Treasure Coast.
We have been working on Fort Pierce and Treasure Coast homes since 2016, which means we know the local permit process, the common porch structures in this area's housing stock, and the material choices that hold up here. That local experience shows up in how we scope projects and how we build them.
These proof points add up to one thing: a contractor who builds sunrooms that last in Fort Pierce's specific climate and regulatory environment. We back every project with a written scope, full permitting, and a final walkthrough before we close out the job.
Have a bare patio slab instead of an existing enclosure? We build new screen rooms from the ground up, fully permitted and coastal-grade.
Learn MoreWork through layout, materials, and room function with a design consultation before any construction begins.
Learn MorePermit timelines in St. Lucie County mean the sooner you start, the sooner you are using your new room - contact us today and we will reply within one business day.