A sunroom is only as good as its foundation, its frame, and its glass. We build to South Florida's wind-load code, pull all permits, and stand behind the work so your new room lasts.

Sunroom construction in Tequesta covers everything from the concrete slab and framing through the glass panels, electrical, and final inspection - most projects run six to twelve weeks from signed contract to the day you walk into your finished room.
The work happens in stages: foundation first, then framing, then glazing and systems, then finishing and inspections. It is not all at once, and most of the disruption is contained to the area where the sunroom connects to your home. If you are still deciding on the right style before committing to construction, start with sunroom additions options to compare how different room types fit your home's footprint and your budget.
If your patio or screened porch is unused from May through October because of heat, rain, and bugs, a fully enclosed sunroom solves those problems permanently. South Florida's rainy season runs roughly six months, and a well-built sunroom changes a rarely-used space into a room you live in every day.
If your household has outgrown its current floor plan but a full addition feels like too much, a sunroom adds real, distinct square footage without breaking into the main structure of the home. It is a practical way to gain a home office, reading room, or casual dining space at a fraction of the cost.
In South Florida's real estate market, buyers consistently respond to well-finished, year-round living spaces. A permitted, inspected sunroom is a documented asset - not an unpermitted structure that raises questions during a sale or complicates insurance coverage.
If a previous screen or glass enclosure is showing drafts, fogged glass, water intrusion, or a roof that pools instead of drains, a fresh construction project addresses those failures at the source rather than patching over them. Waiting lets water damage compound behind the visible surfaces.
Every sunroom construction project starts with the foundation - and in Tequesta's sandy coastal soils, that means careful site prep, proper compaction, and drainage grading before a single board of framing goes up. From there, the structural frame rises, followed by the roof system, glass or panel walls, doors, and electrical work. If the room connects to your home's air conditioning, that coordination happens during the framing phase. We handle the full scope: permit application, construction, inspections, and final walkthrough. Homeowners who want to start fresh with a completely new addition often look at our sunroom remodeling service when an existing enclosure is being replaced rather than built from scratch.
For homeowners who want to begin with a design conversation rather than jumping straight to a build, we also offer dedicated sunroom additions planning - a structured first step that walks through room types, glazing performance, site challenges, and budgets before any contract is signed. The goal is that by the time you commit, you know exactly what you are getting and why each choice was made.
Best for homeowners adding a sunroom where no enclosure exists - starting with a fresh foundation and full construction from the ground up.
Right for homeowners whose existing screen or glass enclosure has failed and needs to be torn down and rebuilt properly on an existing or new slab.
Ideal for families who want a fully insulated, air-conditioned room they can use every day of the year - not just during Tequesta's pleasant winter months.
A good fit for homeowners who want a screened or glass-walled space for Tequesta's fall-through-spring weather without the cost of full climate control.
Building a sunroom in Tequesta means working in one of the most demanding construction environments in the country. The coastal location brings salt air that corrodes standard metal frames within a few years - we specify aluminum framing with quality powder-coat finishes and coated fasteners as the baseline, not an upgrade. The building code requires wind-load engineering for any permanent addition, and that engineering documentation has to be submitted with the permit. Sandy soils near the Loxahatchee River and the Intracoastal drain quickly but can shift under a slab that is not properly compacted and graded - which is why site prep gets as much attention as framing. The ENERGY STAR program offers useful guidance on glazing performance ratings if you want to compare products before your design meeting.
We build in Tequesta and the surrounding communities regularly, which means we know the Village's building department, the typical HOA review timelines in the area, and the material suppliers who stock the right products for coastal construction. Homeowners in neighboring Hobe Sound, FL face the same salt-air conditions, and clients in North Palm Beach, FL deal with similar HOA dynamics - so the experience we have built working across this region makes every project here more efficient.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and we will respond within one business day. We gather basic information about your home, the space you want to enclose, and your rough budget so the first visit is efficient and focused.
We visit your property, take measurements, and assess site conditions - drainage, sun orientation, soil, and the connection point to your home. In Tequesta, afternoon sun exposure and the proximity to water are the two factors that most often shape the design conversation.
Once you approve the proposal and sign the contract, we prepare the drawings and file the permit with Palm Beach County. If your HOA requires design approval, we prepare that submission in parallel - both processes can run at the same time to save weeks on your overall timeline.
With permits in hand, construction begins with site prep and the slab, then framing, glazing, and systems. County inspections happen during and after the build. We walk through the finished room with you before signing off, and you receive all warranty and permit documentation on completion day.
We visit your property, assess the site, and give you a detailed written quote - no pressure and no surprises.
(561) 954-1589Sandy soils near the water shift when drainage is not managed at the slab stage. We assess drainage and soil conditions at your specific site before pouring - a step that prevents the settling, racking frames, and water intrusion that show up in five years when it was skipped. Learn more about slab-on-grade best practices at the National Association of the Remodeling Industry.
Every build is engineered to Palm Beach County's wind-load requirements - stamped drawings, approved materials, and an inspected final product. You will not lie awake during hurricane season wondering if the new room is going to hold, because it was designed and built to handle it.
Aluminum framing with a quality powder-coat finish, coated fasteners, and marine-grade sealants are standard on every Tequesta project - not options you have to request. Salt air close to the Intracoastal eats through lesser materials in a few years; specifying the right products from the start is what protects your investment decade after decade.
We pull every permit ourselves and coordinate all inspections through the Village of Tequesta. The finished documentation - permit, inspection records, and warranty - travels with your home. That paper trail protects you at resale and keeps your homeowner's insurance valid from the day the project is complete.
Our approach to sunroom construction in Tequesta reflects what we have learned working in this specific coastal environment - not a generic national template applied to a local project.
Already have an existing sunroom that needs updating? See how we handle full remodeling projects - from replacing failing glass to reconfiguring a layout.
Learn MoreExplore sunroom addition options to compare styles, room types, and what each approach means for your home's footprint and value.
Learn MoreOur build calendar fills quickly before the cooler months - call now to lock in your start date and be ready for the winter season.