Homestead Gulf Stream Lanai Sunrooms & Patios has been the sunroom contractor Highland Beach homeowners and condo owners call for four season sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms since 2018. We work along South Ocean Boulevard and throughout this barrier island town, responding to new inquiries within 1 business day.

Highland Beach is a mix of oceanfront condominiums and single-family homes, many built in the 1960s through 1980s. The work here calls for contractors who understand older coastal building stock and the expectations of a higher-end residential community.
Seasonal residents in Highland Beach want a room that is comfortable whether they arrive in October or January. A fully insulated, climate-controlled four season sunroom with high-performance glass makes the space genuinely livable year-round without overworking the air conditioning on the hottest days.
Many condo units and single-family homes in Highland Beach have patios or lanais that go unused for months because the heat, humidity, and insects make them uncomfortable. Enclosing the space with screened or glazed panels turns an underused area into somewhere you actually want to spend time.
Screen rooms are a practical option for Highland Beach homeowners who want outdoor-feel living space at a lower cost than a glass-enclosed room. Built with corrosion-resistant framing and coastal-grade screen mesh, a properly constructed screen room holds up against the salt air that degrades lesser hardware quickly.
Homes along South Ocean Boulevard in Highland Beach have distinctive architectural character, and a custom sunroom designed to match that character adds value that a stock enclosure never will. We work from the existing lines of your home outward, not from a catalog inward.
Many Highland Beach homes have original screen enclosures or lanais built in the 1970s or 1980s that are still structurally sound but have aged hardware, failed screens, or glass that no longer meets current energy standards. Updating rather than replacing is often the more economical choice.
Highland Beach properties with ocean or Intracoastal views are ideal candidates for a solarium, which maximizes natural light and views through glass on multiple sides. Built with marine-grade framing and sealed glazing units, a well-constructed solarium turns a premium view into a year-round living space.
Highland Beach sits on a narrow barrier island in Palm Beach County, with the Atlantic Ocean on the east side and the Intracoastal Waterway on the west. That geography means every property in town is exposed to salt air year-round - not occasionally, but constantly, from both directions. Salt accelerates corrosion on metal fasteners, frames, and HVAC hardware, degrades sealants and caulk faster than manufacturers test for in controlled conditions, and puts real wear on screen mesh and glass seals. Materials and installation methods that work fine in an inland zip code fail faster here.
The town was incorporated in 1949 and much of its housing stock - condominiums and single-family homes - was built between the 1960s and 1990s. Buildings of that age in a coastal salt-air environment often need more material prep and surface work than newer construction before a new enclosure or sunroom can be properly attached. The town also operates its own permitting and code enforcement process through the Town of Highland Beach, which is separate from Palm Beach County. Contractors who have only worked in neighboring cities may not be familiar with that process, which adds delays when they encounter it for the first time.
Our crew works throughout Highland Beach regularly, and we pull permits through the Town of Highland Beach building department - not just the county. South Ocean Boulevard is the only main road through town, and access to most properties is directly off that corridor or from short side streets. Parking and staging space near job sites can be limited, and we plan for that before arriving, not after.
The town sits between Delray Beach to the north and Boca Raton to the south. A large share of residents are seasonal or part-time, which means scheduling around departure and arrival windows is something we handle routinely. Many homeowners are away for months at a time, and we can coordinate projects on their behalf so the work is done before they return. Condo associations in Highland Beach often have their own approval requirements on top of the town permit, and we factor that into the project timeline from the beginning.
We also serve nearby Boca Raton, FL, which sits directly to the south and has its own distinct mix of high-rise condos, gated communities, and single-family homes. Our familiarity with both towns means we understand the differences in building stock, permit processes, and homeowner expectations on either side of the town line.
Call us or submit the contact form and we respond within 1 business day. We schedule a visit to your Highland Beach property to assess the space, take measurements, and understand what you want the finished room to do for you.
We review the design options that fit your property and budget, give you a written estimate with clear line items, and flag any condo association approvals that need to happen before we file for a town permit. No surprises later.
We handle the Town of Highland Beach permit application and coordinate any required condo association submissions. We keep you informed during the review period, which matters for seasonal residents working around a travel schedule.
Our crew arrives on a confirmed schedule, works cleanly within the constraints of the property and building rules, and completes the final town inspection. We do a full walkthrough with you before closing out the project.
We know Highland Beach's permit process, condo association requirements, and coastal building conditions. Call or fill out the form below and we will respond within 1 business day.
(561) 407-6473Highland Beach is a quiet, incorporated town on a barrier island in Palm Beach County, sitting between the Atlantic Ocean to the east and the Intracoastal Waterway to the west. The town covers just over half a square mile and has a population of around 4,000 to 4,500 people. It is almost entirely residential - there is very little commercial development within the town limits, which is an intentional part of the community character. South Ocean Boulevard, the local name for State Road A1A, is the main road running through town from north to south, and most properties are accessed directly from it or from short cross streets.
The housing stock is a mix of mid-rise and high-rise condominiums built primarily from the 1960s through the 1990s, and single-family homes ranging from modest to quite large. A significant share of housing units are seasonal or second homes, with a well-off older population making up much of the year-round and part-time resident base. Delray Beach is the neighboring city to the north, and Boca Raton borders the town to the south. Both cities are larger, more commercial neighbors, but Highland Beach itself keeps a distinctly low-density, residential feel that long-time residents protect carefully.
Expand your home with a beautiful sunroom addition tailored to your space.
Learn MoreEnjoy your sunroom year-round with fully insulated four season construction.
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Learn MoreKeep insects out and fresh air in with a professionally installed screen room.
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Learn MoreWe know Highland Beach inside and out - the permit office, the condo rules, and the coastal conditions that demand the right materials. Call us or request a free estimate and hear back within 1 business day.