
Cooper City Lanai Sunrooms & Patios builds enclosed patio rooms, screen rooms, and sunroom additions for Miramar homeowners - constructed for CBS subdivision homes, Broward County wind codes, and South Florida's hot, rainy climate, with free estimates and same-business-day responses.

The subdivision homes that make up most of Miramar were built with open concrete patios that collect standing water, fade under the intense South Florida sun, and go unused for most of the year. An enclosed patio room uses your existing slab and adds a weather-tight aluminum and screen or glass enclosure - giving you a true outdoor living space that works even during Miramar's long wet season.
Miramar gets heavy afternoon thunderstorms from May through October, and the flat terrain and canal corridors nearby keep mosquito pressure high through the wet season. A screen room lets you use your backyard space without the bugs or afternoon rain pushing you inside - one of the most popular upgrades in Miramar's single-family neighborhoods.
Miramar has hot, humid weather for the better part of nine months. A four season sunroom with insulated low-E glass and a mini-split connection stays comfortable year-round and adds real, usable square footage to your home. It is a practical upgrade for Miramar homeowners who work from home or need a dedicated quiet space.
Many Miramar subdivision homes have covered lanais or concrete slabs that were built into the original floor plan but never finished. Converting that space into a glassed-in sunroom costs less than building from scratch and takes advantage of structural work that is already in place - a popular path for homeowners who want maximum space for a controlled budget.
Miramar's intense afternoon sun and daily summer storms can make an uncovered patio unusable for most of the year. A properly designed patio cover provides shade and storm protection without fully enclosing the space - a good fit for homeowners who prefer an open-air feel but need relief from the weather.
Miramar homes from the 1990s and early 2000s that had sunrooms added during construction often have single-pane glass, worn aluminum frames, and seals that have degraded in the heat and humidity. Remodeling these rooms - new glazing, fresh frames, weatherproof seals - makes them comfortable and code-compliant again without the cost of a full rebuild.
The bulk of Miramar's housing stock went up between the early 1990s and the late 2000s. That means most homes are hitting the 20-to-35-year mark - the point when roofs, slabs, frames, and outdoor structures start showing real wear from South Florida's combination of heat, humidity, and hurricane-season storms. Every home in this part of Broward County is concrete block construction, which is the regional standard driven by wind codes and the humid climate. Attaching a sunroom or enclosed patio to a CBS wall requires different anchoring and waterproofing methods than wood-frame construction, and getting that detail wrong leads to leaks and structural problems within a few years.
Miramar's flat terrain creates drainage challenges that affect every outdoor project. The city sits on low-lying land with poor natural elevation change, and parts of it are in or near FEMA-designated flood zones. Standing water after a heavy summer storm is not unusual on Miramar lots, and any sunroom or patio enclosure needs a foundation and drainage plan that accounts for how water moves - or does not move - around the slab. We build every project in Miramar with those conditions in mind, and we engineer to Broward County's wind-load requirements so the structure can handle what hurricane season delivers.
Our crew works throughout Miramar regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and patio enclosure work here. Every enclosed addition we build in the city goes through Broward County Permitting, Licensing and Consumer Protection, the same permitting office that covers Pembroke Pines and most of central Broward County. We have submitted enough permits through this office to know the documentation requirements and how to avoid the delays that slow down projects for contractors who do not regularly work in Broward County.
The main east-west roads in Miramar - Miramar Parkway and Pembroke Road - run through the heart of the city's residential and commercial neighborhoods. The western side of the city, near the I-75 corridor and the edge of the Everglades, has newer subdivisions with larger lots and newer slabs. The eastern neighborhoods, closer to Miramar Town Center, tend to have older homes and more-established landscaping. Both ends of the city have strong HOA presence, and we routinely work through the HOA approval process before submitting permit applications.
We also serve the neighboring city of Hollywood, FL, which borders Miramar to the northeast and north, and Pembroke Pines directly to the north. If you have family or neighbors in either city needing the same type of work, our crew covers the entire area.
Call (754) 318-0423 or submit an estimate request online. We get back to every inquiry within one business day - often the same day - to set a time that fits your schedule.
We come to your Miramar home, evaluate your slab or yard footprint, check drainage, and discuss your options in detail. You receive a written quote with a clear breakdown of costs - no obligation to move forward, and no charge for the visit.
After you approve the quote, we submit the Broward County permit application and schedule your build date. We handle every step with the county - you do not need to be present for permit office visits or inspector coordination.
Our crew finishes the work, passes the county final inspection, and walks through the completed room with you. Most Miramar projects close out the permit within three to five weeks after construction begins, and we do not consider the job done until you are satisfied with the result.
We cover all of Miramar, from the neighborhoods near Miramar Parkway to the western subdivisions near I-75. No obligation, no fees for the on-site visit.
(754) 318-0423Miramar is a large suburban city in southwestern Broward County, roughly midway between Miami and Fort Lauderdale. The city stretches about 14 miles from east to west, making it one of the largest cities in Broward County by land area. Most of its growth happened between the 1990s and the 2000s, when open land in the western and central parts of the city was developed into the planned subdivisions that make up the bulk of the housing stock today. These are concrete block, single-family homes with tile roofs, attached garages, and modest backyards - very consistent construction throughout the city. You can read more about Miramar on Wikipedia.
Miramar has a notably diverse community with strong homeownership culture, and many residents are long-term property owners who invested in their homes years ago and are now looking at improvements and upgrades. Miramar Regional Park provides green space and sports facilities that families across the city use regularly. The western edge of the city borders the Everglades, which adds to the drainage challenges that come with Miramar's flat terrain. If you live closer to Pembroke Pines to the north or toward Hollywood to the northeast, we cover all of those areas and can often schedule neighboring cities on the same run.
Glass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreEnclosed patio rooms, screen rooms, and sunroom additions built for Miramar's subdivision homes. Call us or request an estimate online and we will follow up within one business day.