
LibertyMark Fort Lauderdale Sunrooms serves Pompano Beach with sunroom construction, screen room installation, and patio enclosures built for South Florida conditions. Our crew works throughout Pompano Beach and understands the salt-air conditions, CBS construction, and HVHZ permit requirements that affect every project in this city.

Building a sunroom from scratch in Pompano Beach means anchoring into concrete block foundations, pulling permits with the city, and using HVHZ-rated materials throughout. For homeowners who want a genuinely new addition rather than a prefab enclosure, sunroom construction gives you the most control over size, layout, and finish quality.
Pompano Beach has miles of canals and a long stretch of Atlantic coastline, and mosquito pressure in neighborhoods near the water is significant. A screen room lets you use your patio or pool area year-round without fighting insects or staying inside on otherwise pleasant evenings.
Open patios in Pompano Beach take a beating from summer afternoon storms and year-round UV exposure. Enclosing the patio adds a covered, protected space that is comfortable during rain and usable even in the hottest months when the sun would otherwise make an open patio unbearable.
Many Pompano Beach single-family homes from the 1950s through 1980s are modest in square footage. Adding a sunroom is one of the most straightforward ways to expand usable living space on an existing footprint without the disruption and cost of a full home addition.
For homeowners in Palm Aire or the waterfront neighborhoods who want a space that functions as a real room year-round, a fully conditioned sunroom with insulated glass keeps the space comfortable through Pompano Beach summers when temperatures and humidity are at their peak.
Pompano Beach homes vary from mid-century concrete block ranches near Atlantic Boulevard to newer canal-front builds near the Intracoastal. A custom sunroom is designed around your specific roofline, foundation, and layout so the result looks like it was built with the house, not added as an afterthought.
Pompano Beach sits directly on the Atlantic coast with more than 20 miles of navigable waterways cutting through the city. Homes near the Intracoastal Waterway and finger canals deal with salt-laden air year-round, and that salt corrodes metal framing, fasteners, and hardware in ways that do not happen on inland properties. The city gets over 60 inches of rain per year, mostly in intense summer storms, and its flat terrain means drainage is slow. A sunroom built without proper sealing, slope, and drainage integration will leak at the seams within a few seasons. Contractors who do not work regularly in coastal South Florida may underestimate how quickly the environment degrades materials that would last decades elsewhere.
The building code context matters just as much as the climate. Pompano Beach falls within Broward County's High-Velocity Hurricane Zone, and all sunroom structures must meet HVHZ standards for wind load, impact resistance, and structural anchoring. The city's permit process requires specific documentation, engineering sign-offs, and inspection stages that vary from what contractors outside Broward County are used to. On top of that, the vast majority of Pompano Beach homes are built with concrete block and stucco rather than wood framing. Anchoring a sunroom correctly into a CBS wall requires different fasteners, drilling methods, and flashing details than wood-frame construction. Getting those details wrong creates water intrusion, structural movement, and code violations.
Our crew works throughout Pompano Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Pompano Beach Building Division and are familiar with their plan review process and inspection requirements. The most common construction type we work on here is concrete block with stucco, and most of those homes sit on flat lots with minimal elevation change.
The city has distinct areas with different housing types. Palm Aire, in western Pompano Beach, has larger single-family homes on golf-course lots where homeowners typically want a sunroom that matches the scale of the property. The neighborhoods east of US-1 and along Atlantic Boulevard have a denser mix of older homes and condo buildings where we see more screen room and patio enclosure requests. Canal-front properties near the Intracoastal are among the most salt-exposed, and those projects call for aluminum framing with marine-grade finishes throughout.
We also serve neighboring Deerfield Beach, FL to the north, where the housing stock, coastal conditions, and permit environment are very similar to Pompano Beach.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form on this site. We respond within one business day to schedule your no-cost on-site estimate at a time that works for you.
We visit your Pompano Beach property, measure the space, assess the existing foundation and wall construction, and review any HOA or city requirements. You receive a written quote with line-item costs before we move forward, so there are no surprises.
We submit the permit package to the City of Pompano Beach Building Division and schedule construction to begin after approval. City plan review typically takes two to four weeks, and we monitor the status so you are not waiting without information.
Our crew builds the project, coordinates required city inspections, and walks you through the finished space before we consider the job done. We do not leave until every inspection is passed and the work meets your expectations.
We serve homeowners throughout Pompano Beach with free on-site estimates and no-pressure quotes. Call us or submit the form and we will reach out within one business day.
(754) 243-8239Pompano Beach is a city of roughly 115,000 people situated on the Atlantic coast between Fort Lauderdale to the south and Deerfield Beach to the north. The city covers about 24 square miles, with neighborhoods that range from the beachfront along A1A and the Pompano Beach Fishing Village area, to the established inland community of Palm Aire in the west. The city has more than 20 miles of navigable waterways, and many neighborhoods sit directly on canals that connect to the Intracoastal Waterway. Homes on these canals often have docks, seawalls, and direct water access that make them attractive but also more demanding to maintain.
Most of the housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1980s during Florida's rapid postwar growth. Concrete block construction is the norm, and many homes have modest lots with flat yards and open patios that are candidates for enclosures and sunroom additions. The city has a roughly equal split between owner-occupied and rental properties, with a concentration of condominiums near the beach and along the Intracoastal. Nearby Coral Springs, FL to the west offers a contrasting inland environment, while the coastal conditions in Pompano Beach itself drive different sunroom material and design decisions.
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Learn MoreHomeowners throughout Pompano Beach have trusted LibertyMark for sunroom construction, screen rooms, and patio enclosures. Call today or submit your request online and we will reach out within one business day.