
Mosquitoes and afternoon heat should not keep you inside. We build permitted, wind-rated screen rooms that turn your patio into outdoor space you can use every evening of the year.

Screen room installation in Tequesta means building an aluminum-framed enclosure with fiberglass or mesh screening on the walls and roof - giving you fresh air and garden views while keeping insects, debris, and light rain out, with most installations completed in one to three days on-site once the permit is approved.
In a community like Tequesta, where the outdoors is part of daily life but mosquitoes and no-see-ums make open patios miserable from dusk onward, a screen room is a practical answer. You get the feel of being outside without the bugs or the full force of the afternoon sun. It is not a fully conditioned room, but it adds genuinely usable square footage to your home at a fraction of the cost of an enclosed addition.
Many homeowners start by asking whether they should screen-enclose their existing patio or go further with a fully enclosed room. If you want full climate control and year-round comfort, our patio enclosures page covers that option. If you already have a screen room and are thinking about upgrading it, check out patio-to-sunroom conversion.
In Tequesta, mosquitoes and no-see-ums are a real outdoor nuisance, especially in the warm, wet months from spring through fall. If you find yourself retreating inside every evening because the bugs take over, a screen room solves that problem for good - not just when the wind is right.
If you already have a concrete slab and a roof overhang out back, you are most of the way there. A screen enclosure converts that existing structure into a defined, protected room at a fraction of the cost of a full addition. Many Tequesta homes were built with this kind of patio.
South Florida's afternoon sun is intense, and an open patio can feel punishing from late morning onward. A screen room with a solar-screen roof panel gives you shade and airflow at the same time, making the space genuinely comfortable during the hours you actually want to use it.
A screen room adds functional square footage - a place to eat, entertain, or let the kids play - without the disruption, cost, or permitting complexity of a full room addition. If your family has outgrown the indoor space but a full addition feels like too much, a screen room is a practical step.
We build house-attached screen rooms on existing slabs or new poured footings, handling the full scope - frame fabrication, screen installation, door placement, and the Palm Beach County permit. Roof styles range from flat to gable or hip depending on your home's roofline and how you want the finished room to look. Screen type is a real choice here: standard fiberglass screen keeps bugs out, a solar-density weave reduces heat gain, and a pet-resistant option holds up against claws. We walk you through samples before anything is ordered.
For homeowners who want to take the next step from a screen room to a fully enclosed space, we also handle patio-to-sunroom conversion and patio enclosures with insulated walls, glass panels, and climate control. The frame and footings from a screen room often carry over into that upgrade, so starting with a screen room does not lock you out of a future conversion.
Best for homeowners with an existing covered patio or lanai slab who want to enclose the space quickly and affordably.
Suits yards where the screen room is placed away from the main house - around a pool, over a garden patio, or as a standalone retreat.
Ideal for homeowners who want meaningful shade and heat reduction inside the room, not just bug protection.
Right for households with dogs or cats who might otherwise claw or push through standard fiberglass mesh.
Palm Beach County sits on Florida's Atlantic coast, and Tequesta's proximity to the ocean and the Intracoastal Waterway means salt air is a year-round presence. Aluminum framing holds up well in coastal conditions, but the quality of the finish and the hardware at the joints matters. Cheaper fasteners and hinges rust quickly in this environment - within a season or two they start failing. We use hardware and finishes specified for coastal installations because that is what lasts here, not just what looks good at installation.
Wind is the other big factor. Florida's building code for Palm Beach County includes strict wind-load requirements for permanent structures. Screen rooms must be engineered and permitted to those standards, and a contractor who pulls a proper permit and uses code-compliant products is giving you something that has a real chance of surviving hurricane season. We also build screen rooms for homeowners in North Palm Beach and Lake Park, where the same coastal conditions and permit requirements apply.
For more on Florida's wind-load requirements and what they mean for screen enclosures, the National Sunroom Association maintains standards for how screen rooms and sunrooms should be designed and built throughout the country.
We come to your home, assess the existing slab or patio, and talk through your goals - size, roof style, door placement, screen type. You leave with a clear picture of what is possible and a written proposal that spells out exactly what is included. We reply within one business day.
Once you agree on the design and sign the contract, we finalize the drawings needed for the permit application. If your HOA requires approval, we confirm what documentation they need and help you start that process at the same time.
We submit the permit application to the appropriate local building office with engineered drawings showing the structure meets Florida's wind-load requirements. Review typically takes a few weeks - we track the status and notify you when approval comes through.
The crew assembles the aluminum frame, installs the roof panels, and stretches and fastens the screen. Most installations are completed in one to three days. A building inspector signs off on the completed project, then we walk you through the finished room and review any maintenance information.
We handle the permit, the engineering, and every step. Free estimates, no pressure, no surprises.
(561) 954-1589Every screen room we build includes the building permit - we handle the application and coordinate the inspection. Any contractor who suggests skipping the permit is cutting a corner that comes back to hurt you at resale, and it leaves you with a structure that was never verified to meet Florida's wind standards.
Salt air near the Intracoastal eats through standard hinges and fasteners within a season or two. We specify corrosion-resistant hardware on every coastal installation in Tequesta because it is what holds up - and because rust stains and failing hardware are the first things a home inspector notices.
Florida requires a proper contractor license - not just a local business license - to legally build screen enclosures. Verify any contractor at myfloridalicense.com before signing anything. It takes two minutes and tells you whether they have met the state's requirements for this type of work.
Standard screen keeps bugs out. Solar-density screen also cuts heat gain, which makes a real difference in a room you want to use from May through October. We show you samples of every option we carry so you can make an informed choice before anything is ordered.
A screen room built to Florida's coastal standards, with the right hardware and a proper permit, is one you can count on through hurricane season and still enjoy every other week of the year. That is the only kind we build.
Take an existing screened or open patio all the way to a fully enclosed, climate-controlled sunroom.
Learn MoreEnclose your patio with insulated walls and glass panels for a fully conditioned room you can use even in Florida's hottest months.
Learn MoreSummer mosquito season comes around fast - get your free estimate now and have your screen room ready before it hits.