
Miami Shores Lanai Sunrooms and Patios builds custom sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for homeowners across Miami, FL - working in diverse neighborhoods from Coconut Grove to Little Havana, meeting Miami-Dade wind-load standards, and managing every permit from application to final inspection.

Miami has dozens of distinct neighborhoods - from the historic bungalows of Coconut Grove to the concrete block homes of Little Havana - and each property has its own roofline, footprint, and character. A custom sunroom designed around your specific home fits naturally rather than looking like an afterthought.
Miami's afternoon thunderstorms and mosquito season make open patios frustrating for much of the year. An enclosed patio with screen or glass panels extends your usable outdoor space across all twelve months without the bugs, the rain, or the heat radiating off unshaded concrete.
A fully insulated, air-conditioned sunroom with impact-rated glazing is the right choice for Miami homeowners who want year-round comfort. Impact glass also satisfies Miami-Dade's hurricane protection requirements, so the same glazing that keeps you cool keeps the room safe during storm season.
For Miami homeowners who want fresh air without insects or direct sun, a properly framed aluminum screen room is the most cost-effective way to gain outdoor living space. Screen rooms can be permitted and built quickly, making them a popular starting point before a full enclosure.
Many of Miami's older single-family neighborhoods have properties with rear yards large enough for a true room addition. Adding square footage through a permitted sunroom increases living space without the cost of a full home addition, and in Miami's real estate market, usable conditioned space has real value.
Miami's intense UV exposure and salt air degrade painted surfaces faster than in most cities. Vinyl-framed sunrooms resist fading, salt corrosion, and moisture without requiring repainting - a practical low-maintenance choice for busy homeowners across the city.
Miami sits at the southern tip of the Florida peninsula, in one of the most active hurricane corridors in the United States. Any structure attached to a Miami home - a sunroom, patio enclosure, or screen room - must meet Miami-Dade County's wind-load and impact-resistance building standards, which are among the strictest in the country. Getting permitted work done by a licensed contractor is not just a formality here. It is the difference between a structure that survives a major storm and one that becomes a liability. Beyond hurricane code, the combination of intense UV exposure, salt air from Biscayne Bay, and daily summer rain accelerates wear on every exterior material.
Miami's housing stock is unusually diverse. Neighborhoods like Allapattah and Little Havana have concrete block homes built in the mid-20th century. Areas like Coconut Grove have older wood-frame and masonry homes with specific architectural character. The Brickell corridor and newer developments have modern construction. A contractor who works across the city understands that the right approach - framing method, materials, permit route, and design - varies from one property to the next. That local knowledge saves time, avoids rework, and produces results that hold up in South Florida's demanding climate.
Our crew works throughout Miami regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We are based in Miami Shores, a few minutes north of the city line, which means we are on Miami jobsites often and know the differences between neighborhoods - the older CBS homes in Allapattah, the tree-lined lots in Coconut Grove, the denser older blocks in Little Havana, and the flat, low-lying properties in areas closer to the FEMA-designated flood zones near the bay.
Miami is a city where traffic on I-95 and Biscayne Boulevard can dramatically affect how a workday goes. We account for that in our scheduling and communication with homeowners. Whether a project is near Miami International Airport, along SW 8th Street in Little Havana, or on the older residential streets in Wynwood, we plan accordingly and keep you updated.
We also serve the communities north of Miami. Homeowners in Miami Shores - where our business is based - and in Miami Springs call us for the same range of sunroom and patio enclosure work.
Call or submit the contact form and we respond within one business day to schedule a site visit. You do not need a plan or drawings ready - we build the estimate from what we find on site.
We walk your property, measure, review your permit requirements, and explain what the work involves and what it costs. You get a written quote before making any decision - no high-pressure close.
After you sign the contract, we file the permit with the applicable Miami-Dade department and begin construction once approved. Most projects run four to eight weeks from permit approval to completion.
We schedule and pass the final inspection, then walk through the completed project with you. You receive all permit paperwork for your records and insurance purposes.
We cover all of Miami and respond within one business day. No obligation - just a straightforward conversation about your project and what it will realistically cost in Miami's building environment.
(786) 435-9561Miami is a major city in Miami-Dade County with a population of more than 400,000 inside city limits. It is bordered by Biscayne Bay to the east and spreads westward across flat, low-lying land toward the Everglades. The city has dozens of distinct neighborhoods - Coconut Grove is one of the oldest, with tree-lined streets and older homes along the bay. Little Havana, centered on SW 8th Street, is densely built with older single-family and multi-family housing. Brickell and downtown are high-rise corridors with condos and commercial towers. Wynwood has shifted from warehouses to a mixed neighborhood with new residential development. Miami is also a major international gateway through the Port of Miami and Miami International Airport.
For homeowners, Miami means a tropical climate with real hurricane exposure, intense year-round sun, and the kind of heat and humidity that tests outdoor building materials constantly. The city's housing stock ranges from concrete block homes built in the 1940s and 1950s to modern construction - and what works for one property type does not always work for another. We serve not just Miami itself but also the communities to the north and northwest, including Hialeah and North Miami.
Protect your outdoor space with a durable, attractive patio cover.
Learn MoreWe are licensed, permitted, and based nearby in Miami Shores. Contact us now before our schedule fills up for the season.