
Sunhaven Miramar Lanai Sunrooms & Patios designs and builds custom sunrooms, screen enclosures, and patio rooms for Cooper City homeowners - permitted work, HOA-ready designs, and materials that hold up in South Florida's heat and humidity.

Cooper City is a tightly built residential community where appearances matter, HOA rules are enforced, and homeowners stay for decades. The work we do here is designed to look like it always belonged on the house.
Cooper City homeowners tend to stay in their homes for years, and they want additions that look intentional, not tacked on. A custom sunroom is designed to match the home's existing roofline, stucco finish, and window style - which also makes HOA approval go much smoother in this community.
Cooper City's afternoon thunderstorms and summer mosquito season make a properly screened outdoor room one of the most practical home improvements you can make here. A screened room extends the usable season of your outdoor space and keeps rain out during those quick, heavy summer storms that roll through almost daily.
Most homes in Cooper City were built with open concrete slabs behind the house that sit unused for most of the year because of the heat and bugs. Enclosing that slab with aluminum framing and screen or panel glazing turns a neglected space into a shaded, usable room without requiring a new foundation or dramatically larger permit.
Cooper City families who work from home or want a genuine extra room - not just a covered patio - benefit from a fully insulated, air-conditioned sunroom that handles the full range of South Florida weather. With the right glass and cooling, the room is as comfortable as the rest of the house on the hottest July day.
For Cooper City homeowners who want shade and rain protection without a full enclosure, a properly engineered patio cover is a straightforward first step. It shades the slab, protects outdoor furniture from UV damage, and makes the back yard usable on those bright midday hours when direct sun makes sitting outside miserable.
An all season room sits between a screened enclosure and a fully air-conditioned addition - it has solid walls and windows but is designed to be ventilated naturally most of the year. For Cooper City homeowners with a budget between a basic screen room and a full four-season addition, this is often the right middle ground.
Cooper City was built out mostly during the 1970s through the 1990s, which means a significant share of homes here are now 30 to 50 years old. The original concrete slabs, rooflines, and stucco finishes were put in place under building codes that predate current Broward County standards. When you attach a new sunroom or enclosure to a structure of that age, the connection points need to be assessed carefully - you cannot just bolt into old stucco and assume it will hold through a category-strength wind event. Contractors who work regularly in Cooper City understand the construction methods used in these neighborhoods and know how to make a solid, code-compliant connection.
Cooper City also sits on flat land with a naturally high water table, and the soils are a mix of sandy material and marl over a shallow limestone base. This affects drainage around any new slab work, and a patio enclosure or sunroom addition built without accounting for it can end up with water pooling under the foundation after a heavy storm. The city is also close enough to the Everglades fringe that moisture in the ground and air is a constant factor - materials need to be selected with that in mind, and wood framing has almost no place here.
Our crew works throughout Cooper City regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and patio enclosure work here. The residential neighborhoods in Cooper City are consistent - concrete block construction, flat lots, modest setbacks, and HOA rules that pay close attention to exterior appearances. That consistency actually makes planning easier because we know what to expect before we arrive.
Most of Cooper City is accessed off Griffin Road and Flamingo Road, and we are in these neighborhoods throughout the week. Near Brian Piccolo Park and the surrounding residential streets, we work on properties that have been in the same family for 20 or 30 years - homes where the original screen enclosure has finally given out after decades of sun and storm cycles and needs either a full replacement or a significant rebuild. We also see a lot of patios and slabs that were poured in the 1980s and are now cracked or uneven, which requires addressing before any new enclosure framing goes up.
Cooper City shares a border with Davie to the north and west, and we work across that line regularly. Homeowners in both communities often have similar property types and face the same permit requirements through Broward County.
We respond to every Cooper City inquiry within one business day. The initial conversation covers your project goals, your approximate budget, and when you want work to start so we can schedule an on-site visit that fits your schedule.
A project consultant visits your Cooper City home, measures the space, reviews the existing slab condition, and checks any HOA design guidelines that apply to your subdivision. The visit is free, and you leave with a written estimate that covers the full scope before you commit to anything.
We submit the permit application and handle HOA design paperwork at the same time to prevent sequential delays. Cooper City projects require Broward County wind-load compliance, and we build the permit package to meet that standard from the start so there are no back-and-forth revision requests.
Once permits are in hand, the crew works to the agreed schedule and keeps the job site clean. We schedule the final inspection with the city, walk through the finished room with you, and address any remaining items before closing the project.
We serve all of Cooper City, FL and reply within one business day. Free on-site estimate - no pressure, just a real number for your specific project.
(754) 812-0382Cooper City is a small, planned city in Broward County, incorporated in 1959 and built out primarily as a residential community. It covers roughly 8.5 square miles and is home to about 35,000 residents - most of them homeowners, which is unusual for South Florida. The housing stock is dominated by single-family concrete block homes built between the 1970s and the 1990s, with flat lots, fenced yards, and driveways that are a mix of poured concrete and pavers. According to Cooper City's profile, the city consistently ranks among Broward County's higher-income communities, and residents tend to stay long-term and invest in their properties.
The western edge of Cooper City borders the eastern fringe of the Everglades, which gives the city a quieter, more suburban feel than the denser coastal communities to the east. Brian Piccolo Park, a large Broward County recreational facility within city limits, draws families from across the area and anchors the sense of community here. Neighboring Pembroke Pines sits directly to the south and shares much of the same building character and property profile, and we work across both communities regularly.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreTurn your underused deck into a bright, enclosed sunroom retreat.
Learn MoreWe cover all of Cooper City, FL and respond within one business day. Permitted work, HOA-ready designs, and materials built for South Florida - call now or submit a request online.