
TrueView Daytona Beach Sunrooms remodels existing sunrooms and installs screen enclosures, enclosed patio rooms, and four season sunrooms for Deltona homeowners - from the original Deltona Lakes concrete block subdivisions to the newer streets near Saxon Boulevard, with every project permitted through the Volusia County Building Division and built to Florida Building Code wind-load standards.

Deltona has a large stock of homes with screen enclosures and covered patios that were built during the General Development Corporation era and are now 30 to 50 years old. Corroded aluminum framing, failed screen mesh, and roof panels that no longer seal against Florida's summer storms are the most common problems we find on these older structures. Our sunroom remodeling service replaces the worn components and brings the enclosure up to current Florida Building Code without requiring a full tear-down and rebuild.
Deltona's afternoon thunderstorms roll through nearly every day from June through September, and the standing water they leave behind keeps mosquito populations high well into the fall. A properly built screen room with a sealed base track and a roofed overhead structure turns your back patio into a usable outdoor space for most of the year, not just the brief dry season when conditions are comfortable without one.
Deltona is primarily a city of concrete block single-family homes on quarter-acre lots, and many of those homes have rear patios that have been sitting open or under a failing aluminum screen structure for years. Enclosing the patio with solid walls, a properly pitched roof, and sealed windows turns that wasted space into a room that handles Volusia County's heavy summer rain and adds real usable square footage to the home.
Many of the original Deltona Lakes homes were built with open rear patios sized to the standard lot dimensions of the 1970s and 1980s. A covered and enclosed patio structure protects that existing concrete slab, stops rain from pooling against the back of the house, and gives Deltona homeowners a sheltered outdoor area that is actually functional during the long Florida summer rather than sitting unused through storm season.
Deltona homeowners who commute to Orlando or Daytona Beach often spend more time at home on weekends than during the week, and a fully insulated four season sunroom gives the house a comfortable gathering space that works in both the humid August heat and the cooler January mornings when Central Florida occasionally sees temperatures dip toward freezing. Tied into the existing HVAC system, it stays usable without adding a separate heating or cooling unit.
Deltona's original housing stock was built at modest square footages on lots that have room to expand. A permitted sunroom addition properly attached to the existing concrete block structure adds livable square footage that shows up in the home's appraised value - an important consideration for cost-conscious Deltona homeowners who are investing in a property they plan to hold for the long term.
Deltona was built out almost entirely between the 1960s and the 1990s by General Development Corporation, which means a very large share of homes in the city are now 30 to 50 years old. At that age, original screen enclosures and covered patios have gone through decades of Florida's most demanding weather - daily summer thunderstorms, periodic tropical storm events, and the slow corrosion that comes from sustained heat and humidity. The concrete block and stucco construction that dominates Deltona is durable, but the outdoor structures attached to those homes were often built with aluminum framing and roofing systems that have a shorter useful life, and a lot of them in Deltona have now reached or passed that limit.
Deltona also sits in Volusia County between two major metro areas, which means the local building environment reflects both inland Central Florida conditions and proximity to the coast - projects need to meet Florida Building Code wind-load requirements that account for the hurricane risk the entire region faces. Volusia County was affected by both Hurricane Irma in 2017 and Hurricane Ian's outer bands in 2022, which reinforced just how much stress a named storm puts on screen rooms and patio enclosures that were not built or repaired to current code standards. The Volusia County Building Division handles permits for residential additions in Deltona, and working with contractors who know that process saves time and prevents surprises during plan review.
Our crew works throughout Deltona regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Deltona is a large city with neighborhoods spread across a wide area between Interstate 4 and the western edge of Volusia County, and the homes we work on range from the original Deltona Lakes subdivisions with their 1970s-era concrete block ranches to the newer streets near Saxon Boulevard and Doyle Road where houses were built in the 1990s and 2000s. We pull permits through the Volusia County Building Division for Deltona projects and are familiar with their plan review timeline and documentation requirements.
Deltona's geography is shaped by its lake system - there are dozens of lakes throughout the city, and many residential streets are laid out around or between them. Lake Monroe sits on the southern boundary of the city where it meets Sanford, and properties near the water share some of the same elevated-moisture conditions we see on canal-front lots in other parts of the region. Lyonia Preserve, a protected Florida scrub habitat in the middle of the city near Howland Boulevard, is one of the more distinctive local landmarks - homeowners near the preserve often have sandy, well-drained lots that behave differently under slab construction than the heavier soils elsewhere in Volusia County.
We also serve homeowners in DeLand, which sits just to the northwest of Deltona and has a similar mix of older CBS construction and newer subdivisions that call for the same range of sunroom and enclosure work.
Contact us by phone or through the online form with a brief description of what you are looking to do. We reply within one business day to schedule a free on-site visit at a time that fits your schedule.
We come to the property, assess the existing structure or slab, check for corrosion, settling, and drainage issues, and measure the space. You receive a fixed-price written estimate covering the full scope - including any prep work - before you commit to anything.
Once you approve the design and estimate, we file the permit application with the Volusia County Building Division and order materials during the review period. Permit review in Volusia County typically takes two to four weeks, and ordering materials in parallel keeps the overall timeline tight.
Most Deltona remodel and enclosure projects take one to three weeks to build once permits are in hand. We schedule required county inspections, walk through the finished work with you to confirm everything is correct, and do not call the project done until you are satisfied with the result.
We serve Deltona homeowners across the original Deltona Lakes neighborhoods and the newer subdivisions throughout the city - call or submit your project details and we will respond within one business day.
(386) 278-1903Deltona is one of Florida's largest cities by population, with around 100,000 residents spread across a wide suburban footprint in central Volusia County. The city grew from the Deltona Lakes planned community developed by General Development Corporation starting in the 1960s, and most of the residential neighborhoods were built out in phases through the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. The result is a city that is almost entirely single-family homes on modest suburban lots - concrete block and stucco construction, attached garages, and rear patios that reflect the building standards of the era when each section was built. Howland Boulevard and Deltona Boulevard are the main corridors locals use to navigate the city, with Saxon Boulevard serving the newer areas in the southern part of town.
Deltona's location on Interstate 4, roughly 25 miles from both Orlando and Daytona Beach, has made it a practical home base for commuters to both metro areas while maintaining a distinctly suburban character. The city has dozens of lakes scattered throughout its neighborhoods - properties near the water share elevated moisture conditions that affect outdoor construction and material selection. The Lyonia Preserve, a protected Florida scrub preserve near the center of the city, is one of the more distinctive local landmarks and gives the surrounding neighborhoods a more natural feel than typical suburban Volusia County streets. We also serve homeowners in nearby Sanford, which sits to the west of Deltona along Lake Monroe and has a similar mix of older and newer single-family housing stock.
Call us today or submit your project details online - we serve all of Deltona and reply within one business day.