
A fully insulated, climate-controlled room that stays comfortable through South Florida summers - wind-rated, permitted, and built to last.

Four season sunrooms in Miramar, FL are fully insulated room additions with real windows, a connected cooling system, and a solid roof - designed so the room stays comfortable through South Florida heat, humidity, and storm season, not just in winter.
In most of the country, the challenge is keeping a sunroom warm in winter. In Miramar, the real question is how to keep it cool from May through October. Without proper insulation, high-performance glass, and a reliable cooling connection, a sunroom becomes a greenhouse by mid-morning in July. A four season room solves that problem by treating the sunroom to the same construction standard as the rest of your home.
Homeowners who want something a bit simpler sometimes compare this option to all season rooms, which cover similar ground. The right choice depends on how you plan to use the space and how important year-round climate control is for your household.
If South Florida's heat and afternoon storms push you indoors by mid-morning, a four season sunroom gives you natural light and an outdoor view without the discomfort. You stay connected to your yard or pool without sitting in direct sun.
A screened enclosure offers some protection but no climate control. If you already use the space but want it to be genuinely comfortable in July and August, upgrading to a fully enclosed four season room is the direct solution.
A four season sunroom with its own cooling and good natural light makes a comfortable, year-round workspace. Remote workers get the separation and quiet of a dedicated room without building a full interior addition.
A finished, climate-controlled room can serve as a playroom now and a reading room or guest space later. Because it connects to the main house and works year-round, it functions like a regular room rather than a seasonal space.
Every four season sunroom we build includes insulated walls, a properly sealed roof, wind-rated windows and doors, and a connection to your home's cooling system or a dedicated mini-split unit. We do not treat glass selection as an afterthought - in South Florida, the performance rating of your glazing determines whether the room is comfortable or unusable during the hottest months.
For homeowners comparing this option against a three season sunroom, the key difference is climate control. A three-season room offers bug and rain protection but is not designed for air conditioning as a primary living space. If you want a room that works in every season South Florida has, including its long, hot summer, the four season build is the right answer.
For homeowners who want a year-round room that works through Miramar's summer heat - connected to HVAC or a dedicated mini-split.
Required in Broward County's high-wind zone - we specify materials that meet the code and hold up through hurricane season.
Every project goes through the city's permit process and required inspections, so the room is documented and clean at resale.
Miramar's tropical climate makes a four season sunroom far more than a nice-to-have. Summer temperatures regularly reach the low-to-mid 90s, and South Florida's rainy season brings nearly daily afternoon thunderstorms from May through October. A sunroom built without proper glazing and cooling is effectively unusable for half the year. High-performance glass that reflects solar heat is the baseline here, not an upgrade - and flat, low-lying terrain means drainage around the new foundation needs careful attention to avoid water pooling at the base of the walls after heavy rain.
Broward County also falls within Florida's high-wind construction zone, so every structural component of a four season sunroom must meet specific wind-load ratings. We work in HOA communities throughout the area, from neighborhoods near Davie to communities in Plantation, and we know what local associations require for exterior additions. Familiarity with the local process is one of the things that keeps projects on schedule here.
For homeowners who want to understand the energy performance standards that apply to new construction in Florida, the U.S. Department of Energy publishes resources on window and glazing performance ratings that are relevant to sunroom glass selection in high-heat climates.
Call or submit the form and we respond within 1 business day. We visit your home to look at the space, take measurements, and talk through your plans - including how you want to use the room and whether you have an HOA to work with. No obligation at this stage.
We prepare detailed drawings and a written proposal. If your neighborhood requires HOA approval, we help you put together the submission - a step that can take several weeks depending on your association's review schedule, so starting early matters.
We file the permit application with engineered drawings that show the structure meets Broward County's wind-load and energy code. Permit review can take a few weeks. We handle all follow-up with the building department so you do not have to.
Once permits are approved, we complete the foundation, framing, glazing, roofing, and mechanical connections. A city inspector signs off on the finished work. You do a final walkthrough with us before the room is yours to use.
We reply within 1 business day - no obligation. Once you submit, we call to schedule a free on-site visit and give you a clear price before any work begins.
(754) 812-0382Every four season sunroom we build uses glazing and structural components that meet Broward County's high-wind requirements. We do not offer non-compliant options because they put your home and your insurance coverage at risk.
Pulling permits and scheduling required inspections is part of our job, not yours. A permitted, inspected room is documented as safe and legal - the kind of clean record that matters when you sell your home in a competitive South Florida market.
The glass performance rating determines whether your room is comfortable or a greenhouse in July. We give every client a straight comparison of the options we actually offer and what each one means for comfort and cooling costs in this specific climate.
Many Miramar subdivisions have detailed exterior addition rules. We have prepared HOA submissions throughout this area and know what associations here typically require - fewer revision requests means fewer delays for you.
When you add up the permit knowledge, wind-rated construction standards, and HOA experience, what you get is a project that moves forward without the surprises that slow down homeowners who go with contractors unfamiliar with Broward County's specific requirements.
A lower-cost option offering bug and rain protection - the right fit if you do not need air conditioning as a primary feature.
Learn MoreSimilar year-round functionality with some variation in framing and finish options - worth comparing if you are weighing design flexibility.
Learn MorePermit review and HOA approvals take time - starting the conversation now means you are in your new room sooner rather than later.