
LibertyMark Fort Lauderdale Sunrooms builds enclosed patio rooms, sunroom additions, and custom sunroom structures for homeowners throughout Miramar, FL. We work in Miramar regularly, know the city's CBS housing stock from the 1980s through 2000s, and handle Broward County HVHZ permits from start to finish. We reply within one business day.

Most Miramar homes built in the 1980s and 1990s have a rear patio slab that is already the right size for a room addition. Converting that slab into a proper enclosed patio room adds usable square footage without digging new footings, which keeps costs down and construction time short.
Miramar gets significant mosquito and no-see-um pressure from May through October, and an open patio is nearly unusable during those months. A patio enclosure, whether screened or glazed, gives you the outdoor feel without the insects or summer downpours interrupting your time outside.
With median home values in Miramar well above $400,000, a sunroom addition is one of the most efficient ways to add functional square footage without the disruption and cost of a full home addition. Homeowners near Miramar Regional Park and in the subdivisions along the city's western edge use these rooms as home offices, dining rooms, and family spaces.
Many Miramar homes have in-ground pools, and a screen enclosure around the pool and patio area keeps the space cleaner, reduces debris, and adds a layer of safety. Screen rooms in Miramar need to be anchored and braced to HVHZ standards so they hold through hurricane-season wind events.
Miramar's housing mix includes single-family CBS homes, townhomes in HOA communities, and newer two-story builds in gated subdivisions. Each property type has a different roofline and foundation condition, and a custom-designed sunroom is the only way to get a result that looks intentional rather than added on.
Building a sunroom from the ground up in Miramar means starting with a proper slab, engineered wind-load connections, and materials matched to South Florida's heat and humidity. Miramar's concrete block housing tradition makes it especially important to tie new construction correctly into existing walls and foundations.
Miramar grew rapidly between the 1980s and early 2000s, and most of the city's single-family homes date from that period. These are concrete block and stucco structures, typically one story, with tile roofs, two-car garages, and moderate-sized lots - often with fenced backyards and in-ground pools. Homes in this age range are at a stage where exterior stucco cracks around windows and corners, and the original patio slabs are often worn or undersized for the way families want to use the space now. A sunroom contractor who has worked on this kind of housing stock knows what to expect before the first measurement is taken.
Miramar sits firmly in Broward County's High-Velocity Hurricane Zone. That classification means all enclosed structures, including screen rooms and sunrooms, must meet HVHZ engineering and material standards. It also means permits require stamped engineering drawings, wind-load calculations, and inspections that go beyond what is required in most other parts of the country. Miramar also has a large share of HOA-governed townhome and single-family communities, and many of them require architectural review board approval before a building permit is issued. Getting that sequence right, HOA first, then permit, then construction, keeps projects on schedule and avoids costly restarts.
Our crew works throughout Miramar regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Miramar Building and Zoning Division and know their documentation requirements and inspection schedule. Miramar's neighborhoods are laid out along a clear suburban grid, with most residential streets running off Miramar Parkway, Pembroke Road, and Flamingo Road. Many of the homes we work on are in HOA subdivisions that require prior approval for exterior changes, and we know how to put together the drawings and material specs those boards typically ask for.
The city's flat terrain and high annual rainfall, around 60 inches per year, mean drainage from a new roof structure needs to be designed carefully so it does not redirect water toward the foundation or a neighbor's property. Miramar's identity anchors, Miramar Town Center near City Hall, Miramar Regional Park on the eastern side, and the Carnival Cruise Line campus off Red Road, give you a sense of how spread out and suburban this city is. We work in every part of it, from the older neighborhoods east of I-75 to the newer gated communities near the western city limit. Our service area also includes Pembroke Pines, FL to the north, where we see similar housing stock and comparable permit requirements.
Call or submit our estimate form with your address and a brief description of what you want to build. We respond within one business day to schedule an on-site visit.
We visit your Miramar property, measure the space, review the existing slab and wall conditions, and check HOA requirements if applicable. You receive a written, itemized quote with no pressure to commit on the spot.
We submit the permit application to the City of Miramar and order materials once approval is confirmed. Permit review in Miramar typically takes two to four weeks, and we keep you updated throughout.
Most Miramar enclosed patio room and sunroom builds take two to five weeks of construction. We do a final walkthrough with you before leaving the job and address anything that needs adjustment.
We serve all of Miramar, FL and reply within one business day. No obligation, no pressure.
(754) 243-8239Miramar is one of the larger cities in Broward County, with a population of around 140,000 people. It was originally developed as a planned community starting in the 1950s, and its residential streets follow a suburban grid that is characteristic of South Florida's postwar growth. The city expanded rapidly through the 1980s and 1990s, which is when most of its housing stock was built. Single-family CBS homes on moderate lots dominate, with tile roofs, concrete driveways, and fenced backyards with pools being common features across most neighborhoods. There is also a significant townhome and condominium inventory in newer HOA-governed communities, particularly toward the western sections of the city near the Everglades boundary.
Miramar Town Center, the civic hub near City Hall and the public library, sits at the center of the city's community identity. Miramar Regional Park to the east is the largest public park in the city, with an aquatic complex and amphitheater that serves families throughout the area. Major employers including the Carnival Cruise Line campus give the city a stable base of working professional households who tend to invest in their homes. Neighbors to the north in Pembroke Pines share similar housing patterns, and to the east, Hollywood, FL is a frequent reference point for Miramar homeowners who are comparing sunroom options across Broward's southern communities.
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Learn MoreCall us today or request a free estimate online. We serve all of Miramar and reply within one business day.