
Sunhaven Miramar builds sunrooms and patio enclosures for Miramar homeowners. We handle permits, wind-rated construction, and HOA paperwork so you get a finished room without the headaches.

Every service below is built for Miramar conditions - concrete block walls, tile roofs, flat lots, HOA rules, and a climate that puts outdoor structures through a real test every year.
Miramar homes built in the 1990s and 2000s often have underused covered patios that are ready to be enclosed and turned into real living space. A sunroom addition adds square footage your family actually uses, and the mild Florida winters mean the room earns its keep all year.
Miramar's afternoon storms blow in fast, and the mosquitoes are relentless from May through October. A properly screened room lets you sit outside in the evening breeze without the bugs and gives you a dry place to be when those daily thunderstorms roll through.
Most Miramar subdivisions have open concrete slabs behind the house that sit unused because the sun and rain make them uncomfortable. A patio enclosure turns that slab into a shaded, sheltered space without changing your footprint or triggering a full addition permit.
Fully insulated and air-conditioned, a four season sunroom handles everything Miramar throws at it - July heat, October storms, and the occasional January cold snap. It works as an office, playroom, or guest space that feels like a true part of the house.
Miramar's HOA communities are strict about exterior appearances, and a custom-designed sunroom can be built to match your home's roofline, stucco color, and window style exactly. That makes HOA approval much smoother and keeps your home looking like it always had the room.
Converting an existing covered patio into a sunroom is one of the most cost-effective projects for Miramar homeowners because the slab and roof framing are already in place. It shortens the build time and keeps costs predictable since there are fewer unknowns on the job.
Miramar sits in one of the most challenging climates in the country for outdoor structures. The city is in FEMA-designated hurricane territory, and Broward County enforces strict wind-load requirements for any structure attached to a home. A sunroom or patio enclosure built without accounting for those requirements can fail a final inspection, void your homeowner's insurance coverage, or cause real damage during a storm. Contractors who work regularly in Miramar know these standards from experience and build to them automatically.
Beyond hurricane code, Miramar's flat terrain and sandy soil create drainage challenges that affect any concrete slab or foundation work. The city also has a high concentration of HOA communities, and many associations require detailed material and design submissions before approving exterior additions. Working with a contractor who understands the Miramar Building and Permitting Division's process and the typical HOA review timeline saves weeks of back-and-forth and prevents costly rework.
Our crew works throughout Miramar regularly, pulling permits from the City of Miramar Building and Permitting Division and building on the concrete block construction that is standard in every subdivision here. We know that homes in the western communities near I-75 sit closer to the Everglades fringe, where high water tables mean you have to think about drainage on any slab work. The older neighborhoods in the eastern part of the city have slightly different HOA rules and older concrete that requires different prep before attaching new framing.
Residents along Miramar Parkway and Pembroke Road live in dense, established neighborhoods where lot lines are tight and setback rules are enforced carefully. Near Miramar Regional Park, many families have been in the same house for fifteen to twenty years, and their patios and screen enclosures are showing real wear from heat and hurricane seasons. We work in those neighborhoods constantly and know what the local conditions look like on the ground, not just on a map.
If you are in Miramar's western communities along the Turnpike corridor or in the older sections near the eastern city limits, our team covers the whole city. We also serve the neighboring communities to the north, including Pembroke Pines, where many Miramar homeowners have friends and family who are looking for the same type of work.
We reply within one business day to every inquiry. The initial conversation covers your goals, your approximate budget, and your timeline so we can schedule an on-site visit at a time that works for you.
A project consultant visits your home to measure the space, check the existing slab or framing, review any HOA requirements, and walk through your design options. There is no cost for this visit, and you leave with a clear picture of scope and price before any work begins.
We submit the permit application to the City of Miramar and handle HOA paperwork simultaneously to save time. Once permits are in hand, the crew arrives on schedule with all materials staged so your project stays on the agreed timeline.
We schedule the city's final inspection and walk through the finished room with you before closing the job. Any punch-list items get addressed before we consider the project complete.
We serve all of Miramar and reply within one business day. No pressure, no obligation - just a clear conversation about what your project involves and what it will cost.
(754) 812-0382Miramar is a large suburban city in southwestern Broward County, situated roughly midway between Miami and Fort Lauderdale. According to Wikipedia, the city grew rapidly through the 1990s and 2000s, transforming from a small community into one of the largest cities in Broward County by land area. Most of the housing stock is concrete block construction with tile roofs, built inside planned subdivisions with HOAs, two-car garages, and modest backyards. The neighborhoods range from the older, more established communities in the eastern part of the city to newer master-planned developments in the west where the land approaches the Everglades fringe.
The city is anchored by landmarks like Miramar Regional Park, which draws families from across the city, and the Miramar Town Center, where city hall, restaurants, and retail sit together in the heart of the community. Interstate 75 and the Florida Turnpike give residents strong connections north toward Fort Lauderdale and south toward Miami. Miramar is a diverse, family-oriented community with a strong homeownership culture - and many of those homeowners have been in the same house long enough that their original patios and screen enclosures are ready for a refresh. We also work in the surrounding communities, including Pembroke Pines to the north, which shares many of the same housing types and HOA structures as Miramar.
Convert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
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Learn MoreSchedule a free on-site estimate this week and we will have your project scoped and priced before the next storm season begins.