
Ormond Beach Lanai Sunrooms & Patios builds four season sunrooms, screen rooms, and patio enclosures for homeowners in Daytona Beach - including properly permitted construction that meets Florida coastal wind requirements and a crew that understands the aging housing stock and salt-air conditions throughout the city.

Daytona Beach homeowners deal with serious summer heat, frequent afternoon thunderstorms, and salt air that comes off the Atlantic - conditions that make an uninsulated screen room uncomfortable for most of the year. A four season sunroom with insulated panels and climate control works in every month, from a July afternoon during Daytona's peak humidity season to a January morning when a cold front drops temperatures unexpectedly.
Most of Daytona Beach's housing stock dates from the 1950s through the 1980s, and many of those homes were built as modest ranch-styles without significant outdoor living space. A sunroom addition creates a dedicated room off the back or side of the house that connects to your existing floor plan, adds livable square footage, and does not require tearing into the interior layout to accomplish.
Daytona Beach lots sit on flat, low-lying land that tends to collect water after the heavy afternoon storms that roll through every summer. A patio enclosure lifts your outdoor space above rain exposure and creates a protected area that stays dry and usable even when the rest of the yard is soaked - a practical upgrade for any home on one of the city's flood-prone streets.
For Daytona Beach homeowners who want insect control and airflow without committing to a fully enclosed room, a screen room is an efficient first step. It works particularly well in Daytona's milder fall and winter months, and it can serve as the foundation for a more complete enclosure later if your needs or budget change.
Daytona Beach properties vary widely, from narrow beachside lots along Atlantic Avenue to wider parcels in quieter neighborhoods west of US-1 near Midtown. A custom sunroom is designed around your property dimensions, your home's existing footprint, and any local setback or code requirements - so the finished room fits naturally rather than feeling like an afterthought.
Many Daytona Beach homes from the 1960s and 1970s have original concrete slabs that were poured for open patios and never enclosed. Converting an existing slab into a sunroom avoids new foundation costs when the slab is in good condition, and it is one of the more cost-effective ways to gain enclosed living space from something that is already there.
Daytona Beach sits on Florida's northeast Atlantic coast, bordered by the Halifax River on the west side of the barrier island and the Atlantic Ocean on the east. That geography puts every home in the city within range of salt-laden air, high year-round humidity, and a hurricane season that runs June through November. The housing stock reflects decades of exposure to these conditions - the majority of homes were built between the 1950s and the 1980s using concrete block construction, and after 40 to 60 years, aging stucco, corroded metal frames, and weathered screen enclosures are common findings on properties throughout the city. A sunroom contractor who does not regularly work on CBS homes in a coastal Florida climate will struggle to assess these properties accurately.
Florida's building code also imposes strict wind-resistance requirements for coastal Volusia County, and those standards apply to every enclosed addition built in Daytona Beach. Windows, doors, and roof panels must meet specific impact and pressure ratings that increase material costs compared to what you would see quoted in general national guides. Contractors who pull permits regularly in this county know these requirements from the start - and that knowledge prevents the costly corrections and re-inspections that happen when a contractor misses a requirement and has to redo work after the fact.
Our crew works throughout Daytona Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the Volusia County Building and Zoning Division for Daytona Beach projects and are familiar with the review timelines and inspector expectations for enclosed additions in this jurisdiction. That operational familiarity keeps projects moving instead of stalling on administrative details.
Daytona Beach has several distinct neighborhoods with meaningfully different housing types. The beachside corridor along Atlantic Avenue includes smaller homes and condos where salt air accelerates wear on every exterior material. The neighborhoods west of US-1 - including the Midtown area - have more of the older single-story ranch homes and concrete block bungalows that define the postwar building era here. Further south, the city edges into Daytona Beach Shores, which has its own mix of residential and vacation properties. Understanding these differences helps us give accurate assessments rather than one-size-fits-all quotes.
We also serve homeowners in Holly Hill, which borders Daytona Beach to the north and shares the same concrete block housing stock and coastal permit environment. Homeowners in either city often contact us after seeing our work in the other, and we are set up to handle both without needing separate mobilization each time.
You call or submit the online form, and we respond within one business day. We ask a few questions about what you have in mind and schedule a free property visit - because Daytona Beach homes vary enough in age, slab condition, and lot layout that we need to see yours before giving you an accurate number.
We visit at no charge and evaluate your existing slab, the home's exterior, and any setback or code requirements that apply to your specific address. You get a written estimate that covers the full scope, including the permit fee - so cost anxiety is addressed before any decision is made, not after.
We handle the Volusia County permit application and keep you updated through the review process, which typically takes two to four weeks. Once the permit is approved, we schedule the build and walk you through the sequence so you know what to expect each week on the job.
A Volusia County inspector reviews the finished work and signs off before the project closes. We then do a final walkthrough with you - you point out anything that needs attention, and we address it before the crew leaves and before final payment is due.
We serve Daytona Beach and neighboring Volusia County communities. No commitment required - we visit your property and give you a written estimate before you decide anything.
(386) 465-0068Daytona Beach is a city of about 69,000 people in Volusia County, situated on Florida's northeast Atlantic coast with the Halifax River running along the western edge of the barrier island and the Atlantic Ocean on the east. The city is best known nationally for the Daytona International Speedway - home of the Daytona 500 - and for Bike Week, the annual motorcycle rally that draws hundreds of thousands of visitors each March. But Daytona Beach is also a working city with major employers including Halifax Health, a large regional hospital system, and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, which gives the area a more permanent year-round residential base alongside the seasonal tourism economy. Daytona Beach on Wikipedia covers the city's geography and economic background in detail.
Residentially, Daytona Beach breaks into distinct pockets. The beachside strip along Atlantic Avenue near the Boardwalk and Main Street Pier is denser and more tourist-facing, while neighborhoods west of US-1 - including the Midtown area - have more of the older single-family homes where long-term residents have lived for decades. Volusia County has one of the highest concentrations of residents aged 65 and older in Florida, and many homeowners in Daytona Beach have been in their homes long enough that deferred outdoor improvements are common. The city neighbors Daytona Beach Shores to the south and Holly Hill to the north, and many residents move across all three communities regularly.
Expand your living space with a beautiful, professionally built sunroom addition.
Learn MoreEnjoy comfortable indoor-outdoor living throughout every season of the year.
Learn MoreA budget-friendly enclosed space ideal for spring, summer, and fall enjoyment.
Learn MoreDesign a sunroom built precisely to your vision, dimensions, and lifestyle.
Learn MoreExpert structural construction that delivers lasting quality and value.
Learn MoreRefresh and upgrade your existing sunroom with modern materials and features.
Learn MoreKeep insects out while enjoying fresh air with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed, comfortable living area.
Learn MoreUpgrade your deck into a protected, insulated sunroom for year-round use.
Learn MoreEnclosed patio solutions that blend outdoor character with indoor comfort.
Learn MoreFloor-to-ceiling glass solariums that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers providing shade, weather protection, and lasting style.
Learn MoreCall us or submit your information online and we will respond within one business day. We serve all of Daytona Beach and the surrounding Volusia County area - no matter which neighborhood you are in.