
Cooper City Lanai Sunrooms & Patios brings sunroom additions, patio-to-sunroom conversions, and screen room installation to Pembroke Pines - built for CBS homes, South Florida weather, and the Broward County permit process, with free estimates and replies within one business day.

Most homes in Pembroke Pines were built between 1980 and 2005 with a concrete slab patio that sits unused because of heat, bugs, and afternoon storms. A patio-to-sunroom conversion uses that existing slab as a foundation, wraps it with aluminum framing and glass, and turns dead outdoor space into a room your family actually uses every day.
Pembroke Pines sits at the edge of flat South Florida terrain near canal corridors, which means mosquito pressure runs high from May through October. A fully screened room gives you usable outdoor space without the bugs - a practical upgrade for any home with an open patio or lanai.
Pembroke Pines summers run hot and humid from April through November, and a room with single-pane windows will be unusable for most of the year. A four season sunroom with insulated glass and a mini-split stays comfortable all year and functions as real interior square footage rather than just a screened porch.
If your home does not have an existing patio slab to build from, a sunroom addition starts from the foundation up and is attached to your home's exterior CBS wall. For Pembroke Pines homes where the backyard has space but no existing structure, this is the most versatile option.
Many Pembroke Pines HOA communities allow patio enclosures that keep the open feel while adding walls and a screen or glass system. This is a lower-cost option compared to a full sunroom build and works well for homeowners who want protection from rain and bugs without a fully enclosed room.
Pembroke Pines has a large number of homes from the 1980s and 1990s, and sunrooms added during that era often have single-pane glass, aging aluminum frames, and worn seals. Remodeling an older sunroom brings it up to current energy and wind-code standards and makes it a comfortable, usable space again.
Pembroke Pines grew quickly through the 1980s and 1990s, and most of its housing stock is now 25 to 45 years old. That age range means roofs, driveways, fences, and outdoor structures are all reaching the point where they need serious attention. The homes themselves are almost universally concrete block construction - CBS - which is the South Florida standard driven by hurricane building codes and the humid climate. Contractors who primarily work in wood-frame markets have to adjust their anchoring, waterproofing, and attachment methods when they come here, and that learning curve shows up in the finished product.
The western sections of Pembroke Pines, where newer communities were built on what was once wetland or agricultural land near the Everglades fringe, present their own drainage challenges. Flat lots with poor natural drainage mean standing water after a storm is a regular problem, and any outdoor structure needs to account for how water drains around its foundation. Broward County also enforces strict wind-load requirements for all enclosed additions, and every sunroom project here must be permitted and inspected before it can be used. We understand all of this from working in Pembroke Pines regularly.
Our crew works throughout Pembroke Pines regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and patio enclosure work here. For all enclosed additions in this city, we pull permits through Broward County Permitting, Licensing and Consumer Protection, which manages building permits for Pembroke Pines. We have done this enough times to know exactly what documentation the county requires and how to avoid the common delays that slow down first-time applicants.
Most of the residential neighborhoods in Pembroke Pines are organized around Pines Boulevard, the main east-west road that runs through the city. The areas near C.B. Smith Park to the west and the neighborhoods closer to the eastern side of the city near University Drive have different building vintages and property types - we know what to expect at homes across both ends of town. Many of these communities are HOA-governed, and we routinely help homeowners check that their project design meets association guidelines before we submit permits or start work.
We also serve the neighboring city of Miramar, FL, which borders Pembroke Pines to the south and shares much of the same building stock and climate conditions. If you have family or neighbors there looking for the same work, we cover that area with the same crew and the same process.
Reach us by phone at (754) 318-0423 or through the contact form on this site. We respond within one business day - often the same day - to schedule a time that works for your schedule.
We visit your Pembroke Pines home, measure the space, evaluate your existing slab or backyard footprint, and walk through your options. You receive a detailed written quote before you commit to anything - no pressure and no fees for the estimate.
Once you approve the scope and price, we file the Broward County building permit and order your materials. You do not need to make any trips to the permit office or track down inspectors - we manage the entire permitting process on your behalf.
Our crew completes the build, the county inspector signs off, and we do a final walkthrough with you to confirm everything meets your expectations. Most Pembroke Pines projects are permit-closed within four to six weeks of breaking ground.
We serve Pembroke Pines homeowners from Pines Boulevard to the western communities near C.B. Smith Park. Free estimates, no obligation.
(754) 318-0423Pembroke Pines is one of Florida's larger cities, with well over 150,000 residents spread across a dense suburban landscape in Broward County. The city grew rapidly from the 1970s through the early 2000s, filling in former farmland and wetland with planned residential communities, shopping centers, and schools. Most of the housing stock consists of single-family concrete block homes in HOA-governed subdivisions, with older neighborhoods concentrated in the eastern half of the city and newer, larger-lot communities in the west - some of which were developed on land near the Everglades fringe. You can learn more about Pembroke Pines on Wikipedia.
Pines Boulevard runs east to west through the center of the city and is the main artery most residents use every day. C.B. Smith Park on the western side provides green space and recreational facilities that families across the city rely on. Pembroke Pines also operates one of the largest municipally run charter school systems in Broward County, which draws families who settle here long-term and tend to invest in their homes. If you live near Cooper City or south toward Miramar, we serve those communities too and can often schedule jobs in the same part of Broward County on the same day.
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Learn MoreSunroom additions, patio conversions, and screen rooms built for South Florida homes. Call us or submit an estimate request and we will get back to you within one business day.