
TrueView Daytona Beach Sunrooms builds custom sunrooms, screen enclosures, and enclosed patio rooms for Palm Coast homeowners - from the ITT-era concrete block neighborhoods near Palm Coast Parkway to the canal-front lots and newer homes in Grand Haven, with every project permitted through the Flagler County Building Department and built to Florida's coastal wind-load requirements.

Palm Coast lots come in a wide range of shapes and orientations - canal-front properties, wooded corner lots, and the standard suburban footprints of the original ITT sections all call for different approaches to window placement, roof pitch, and drainage. A custom-designed room accounts for the specific exposure and moisture conditions of your lot rather than using an off-the-shelf layout that may not suit the site. Our custom sunroom installation starts with a site evaluation so the design works with your lot, not against it.
Palm Coast homeowners who back up to one of the city's canals know that mosquitoes and no-see-ums are a fact of summer evenings in Florida. A properly screened enclosure with a tightly fitted roof and sealed base track turns the back patio into a usable outdoor room without the bugs, and it holds up to the afternoon thunderstorms that move through nearly every day from June through September.
The single-story ranch homes that make up most of Palm Coast's housing stock typically have a rear concrete slab covered by a basic aluminum screen or awning structure that is now 30 to 50 years old. Enclosing that footprint with a solid-roofed, fully walled room protects the interior from Florida's storm season and gives the home a proper additional room that can be heated and cooled by your existing system.
Palm Coast draws a significant number of full-time residents who want to use their outdoor-facing rooms year-round, not just in the mild months. A fully insulated four season sunroom tied into existing HVAC keeps the space comfortable through the humid August afternoons and the occasional January cold snap when Flagler County dips toward freezing overnight.
Many of Palm Coast's original ITT-era homes were built with modest square footage on lots that have room to expand. A sunroom addition properly permitted and tied to the existing structure adds livable space that shows up in the home's assessed value - important in a market where home prices have risen steadily as Palm Coast has grown from a small planned community to one of Florida's largest cities.
Palm Coast has a large stock of homes with existing screen enclosures and covered lanais that were built decades ago and are now showing the effects of Florida's climate - corroded aluminum framing, torn screen mesh, and roof panels that no longer seal properly against heavy rain. A targeted remodel that replaces the failing components and brings the structure to current wind-load code extends the life of the space without rebuilding from scratch.
Palm Coast was built almost entirely during a single development era - the ITT Community Development Corporation build-out that ran from the early 1970s through the late 1990s. That means the vast majority of homes in the city are now between 25 and 50 years old, which is the window when original roofing, framing, and outdoor enclosure structures begin to reach the end of their useful life. Homeowners across the original sections of Palm Coast are dealing with screen enclosures that were installed decades ago, existing slab surfaces that have settled on the city's sandy coastal soil, and aluminum framing that has corroded through Florida's summer humidity cycles. A contractor familiar with ITT-era concrete block construction and the soil and drainage conditions throughout Palm Coast works more efficiently and spots the prep issues that an outside crew would miss.
The city also sits on Florida's northeast Atlantic coast in Flagler County, which means any permitted addition must meet Florida Building Code wind-load requirements for the coastal zone. Hurricanes Matthew and Irma both affected the Palm Coast area and served as a reminder of how much structural force a named storm can put on screen rooms and sunroom enclosures that were not built to current code. The Flagler County Building Services department handles permits for residential additions in Palm Coast, and experience with their plan review process means a smoother permit timeline for your project.
Our crew works throughout Palm Coast regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Palm Coast is a city of neighborhoods organized around a network of alphabetically named sections - the C, F, R, and other lettered sections each have their own typical lot configurations and building vintages, and we have worked on homes in most of them. The canal system that runs through large portions of the city is one of the most distinctive features affecting jobs here: rear yards that slope toward a canal require drainage planning that a contractor without local experience would not anticipate.
The city's main commercial corridor runs along Palm Coast Parkway, and the Town Center area near City Hall is the closest thing Palm Coast has to a downtown. West of the Parkway, the original ITT neighborhoods extend for miles in grid-like subdivisions with wooded lots and mature canopy. The eastern edge of the city runs toward Flagler Beach on the Atlantic - many homeowners near that corridor deal with salt-influenced air even though they are a few miles inland, which affects our material recommendations for framing and hardware. Washington Oaks Gardens State Park, just south of the city along the Matanzas River, is a well-known local landmark that anchors the quiet southern edge of the Palm Coast area.
We also regularly serve homeowners in South Daytona and Ormond Beach, which sit to the south and give us a continuous service corridor along Florida's northeast coast.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and describe what you are looking for. We reply within one business day to schedule a free on-site visit at a time that works for you.
We visit the property, measure the space, check the existing slab for settlement or cracks, and review the drainage situation - especially important on Palm Coast canal lots. You receive a fixed-price written estimate with no hidden line items before you commit to anything.
Once you approve the design, we submit the permit application to the Flagler County Building Department and order materials during the review window so there is no idle time waiting for both. Most Flagler County permit reviews take two to four weeks.
Construction for most Palm Coast sunrooms takes two to four weeks once permits clear. We schedule required inspections, complete a final walkthrough with you to confirm every detail is finished correctly, and do not consider the job done until you are satisfied.
We serve Palm Coast homeowners from the canal-front ITT neighborhoods to Grand Haven - call us or submit your project details and we will reply within one business day.
(386) 278-1903Palm Coast is Flagler County's largest city, with a population that has grown from around 32,000 in 2000 to well over 90,000 today - one of the faster growth rates in Florida over that period. The city grew out of the ITT Community Development Corporation's planned community, which laid out thousands of home sites in alphabetically designated sections throughout the 1970s and 1980s. The result is a city with a distinct suburban character - tree-lined streets, modest single-family lots, and a canal network that runs through the heart of many residential neighborhoods. Those canals are part of what makes Palm Coast visually distinctive and also what shapes much of the maintenance and construction work homeowners face over time.
Newer development has taken hold in communities like Grand Haven, a gated golf community in the western part of the city, and in the Hammock area along the Intracoastal Waterway, which has larger lots and a more coastal character. The area around Washington Oaks Gardens State Park on the south side of Palm Coast is well known to local residents for its coquina rock shoreline and formal gardens along the Matanzas River. Homeowners across all of these neighborhoods - the older ITT sections, the gated communities, and the coastal corridors - share the same Florida climate challenges that make a well-built sunroom one of the most practical home additions in this area. We also serve neighbors in Ormond Beach just to the south, which has many of the same Atlantic-coast building considerations as Palm Coast.
Call us today or submit your project details online - we serve all of Palm Coast and reply within one business day.