
LibertyMark Fort Lauderdale Sunrooms is Fort Lauderdale's local sunroom contractor, specializing in sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for CBS homes, waterfront properties, and coastal neighborhoods throughout Broward County. Our crew has worked in this city since 2023 and understands local permit requirements, hurricane code, and the specific conditions near the Intracoastal Waterway.

Fort Lauderdale homeowners add sunrooms to create usable year-round living space without losing the outdoor connection that makes South Florida homes special. If you want to expand your home rather than move, sunroom additions are the most flexible and value-adding option available on a single-family home here.
Many Fort Lauderdale homes have open patios that go unused in summer because of heat, mosquitoes, and afternoon thunderstorms. A screened or glassed patio enclosure solves all three problems and makes that space comfortable from January through December.
Fort Lauderdale's mosquito and no-see-um pressure is real, especially near canals and low-lying areas. A screen room lets you enjoy the breeze off the Intracoastal without fighting off insects, and it adds usable square footage without the cost of full glazing.
Fully conditioned sunrooms with insulated glazing let Fort Lauderdale homeowners use their addition as a true living room, home office, or dining space even during the peak of summer heat. With the right glass and HVAC setup, these rooms stay comfortable year-round.
Fort Lauderdale's diverse housing stock ranges from mid-century concrete block ranches in Sailboat Bend to newer waterfront builds in Rio Vista. A custom-designed sunroom fits the existing roofline, footprint, and aesthetic rather than forcing a one-size-fits-all solution onto a home it does not match.
Building a sunroom from scratch on a Fort Lauderdale property requires permits, HVHZ-rated materials, and proper anchoring into concrete block or slab foundations. We handle the full construction process, from permit application through final inspection sign-off.
Fort Lauderdale is built on water. More than 300 miles of inland canals wind through the city, and thousands of homes back up to the Intracoastal Waterway or private canals. Salt air from the Atlantic Ocean and tidal waterways accelerates corrosion on metal framing, fasteners, and glazing hardware in ways that do not happen five miles inland. A sunroom contractor who works only in drier or colder markets will not know which aluminum alloys and powder-coat finishes hold up against coastal conditions here. Selecting the wrong materials means a sunroom that looks great for a couple of years and then shows rust staining, warped seals, and failing hardware.
The building code environment here is also more demanding than most of the country. Fort Lauderdale falls within Broward County's High-Velocity Hurricane Zone, which means all sunroom structures must meet strict wind-load ratings and anchoring standards. The city's building department requires specific documentation and inspection stages that contractors from outside the area may not be familiar with. Beyond permitting, most Fort Lauderdale homes were built with concrete block construction rather than wood framing, which changes how a sunroom attaches to the existing structure. Knowing how to anchor correctly into CBS walls is a basic competency requirement for any contractor doing this work in the city.
Our crew works throughout Fort Lauderdale regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Fort Lauderdale Building Services Division and are familiar with their plan review process and inspection scheduling. Homes near Las Olas Boulevard, Victoria Park, and Rio Vista often have features that require careful attention to architectural continuity. Mid-century concrete block homes in areas like Sailboat Bend need different anchoring approaches than newer construction closer to the beach.
Fort Lauderdale is a city of distinct neighborhoods. Whether a home sits steps from Fort Lauderdale Beach, on a quiet canal in the middle of the city, or in a denser block near downtown, the property conditions vary. We work on waterfront homes along the Intracoastal, older CBS ranches in the western neighborhoods, and condominiums near the beach. Our team also serves neighboring Hollywood, FL to the south, where the housing stock and climate conditions are similar.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and describe your project. We respond within one business day to schedule your on-site visit, and there is no cost for the estimate appointment.
We visit your property, measure the space, assess the existing structure, and review any HOA or municipality requirements that apply. You receive a written quote with itemized costs before we move forward.
We submit the permit package to Fort Lauderdale Building Services and schedule construction to begin after permit approval. City plan review typically takes two to four weeks, and we track the status so you do not have to.
Our crew completes the build and schedules the final city inspection. You do not need to be on-site for every phase, but we walk through the finished space with you before we close out the project.
We serve Fort Lauderdale and surrounding Broward County communities. Get a written estimate with no obligation.
(754) 243-8239Fort Lauderdale is the largest city in Broward County, with a population of about 182,000 people and a well-earned reputation as one of South Florida's most distinctive places to live. The city's more than 300 miles of inland canals give it the nickname "The Venice of America," and neighborhoods like Rio Vista and Victoria Park feature some of the most desirable waterfront residential properties in the region. The Intracoastal Waterway defines the city's eastern edge, and thousands of homes have private docks, seawalls, and direct access to the water. Las Olas Boulevard runs through the heart of the city as its cultural and dining center, flanked by residential streets that include both older bungalows and newer upscale builds.
Housing in Fort Lauderdale ranges from mid-century CBS ranch homes in neighborhoods like Sailboat Bend and Flagler Village to high-rise condominiums along the beach and newer single-family construction farther west. Median home values are well above $400,000, and many owners have invested significantly in their properties over the years. The city's building code environment reflects its coastal location and hurricane exposure, and any structural addition, including a sunroom, requires permits and inspections through the city. We also regularly serve homeowners in adjacent communities including Hollywood, FL to the south, where older CBS housing and similar coastal permit requirements are common.
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