
TrueView Daytona Beach Sunrooms converts open patios into enclosed sunrooms, installs screen rooms, and builds patio enclosures for Titusville homeowners - from the Space Age concrete block neighborhoods near the Indian River to newer subdivisions near Interstate 95, with every project permitted through the City of Titusville Building Division and built to Brevard County wind-load standards.

Titusville has a large stock of single-family concrete block homes built during the Space Age boom - most of them with rear patios on existing slabs that have never been enclosed. Converting that open slab into a proper sunroom transforms one of the most underused parts of the home into year-round living space that handles the Space Coast's intense summer humidity and afternoon storms. Our patio-to-sunroom conversion service includes full structural framing, impact-rated windows, roofing, and permits - built to Brevard County code from the first board to the final inspection.
Titusville sits adjacent to Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, which means the insect pressure here - from mosquitoes to no-see-ums - is among the highest of any community in Brevard County. A properly built screen room with a sealed base track and a roofed overhead structure gives Titusville homeowners a genuinely usable outdoor space through most of the year, rather than a patio that gets abandoned the moment the afternoon thunderstorms start rolling in off the Atlantic.
The mid-century concrete block homes that make up much of Titusville's housing stock were built with open rear patios that are now 40 to 70 years old and exposed to a coastal climate that ages outdoor surfaces faster than in many parts of Florida. Enclosing the patio with solid walls, a properly pitched roof, and weathertight windows protects the original slab, stops moisture from working its way against the home's rear wall, and adds a room that stays dry and usable through the full hurricane season.
Many Titusville homeowners who have lived in their homes since the Space Age era are looking to add comfortable square footage without moving - a sunroom addition built properly onto the existing concrete block structure does exactly that. A permitted addition adds to the home's assessed value, which matters in a market where steady long-term residents are building equity rather than flipping. The work is permitted through the City of Titusville and built to current Florida wind standards.
Titusville homeowners with waterfront or near-water properties along the Indian River deal with salt air and elevated humidity that makes uninsulated outdoor spaces uncomfortable and hard to maintain. A fully insulated four season sunroom with thermal glass and a sealed framing system gives those homeowners a room with the views they paid for - morning light over the lagoon, evening rocket launches visible across the water - without the constant battle against coastal moisture.
Titusville's summer thunderstorm season runs from June through September, with afternoon storms that bring heavy rain, occasional wind, and lightning that can strike the open Indian River. A covered patio enclosure stops rain from driving across an open back patio, protects the existing concrete slab from repeated water impact, and provides a sheltered outdoor area during storm season - useful for a community where many residents spend a meaningful part of the year watching for launches from their own backyards.
Most of Titusville's housing stock was built during the Space Age boom - the late 1950s through the 1980s - when Kennedy Space Center brought thousands of workers to Brevard County and single-family concrete block homes went up across the city to house them. Those homes are now 40 to 70 years old. The screen enclosures, covered patios, and patio slabs attached to them were built to the standards of their era, and many have been quietly deteriorating under Titusville's coastal climate ever since. Salt air from the Indian River Lagoon accelerates corrosion on aluminum framing. Year-round humidity above 70 percent promotes mold and moisture intrusion on any structure that is not properly sealed. Afternoon thunderstorms from June through September push water into base tracks, loosen screen mesh, and stress roofing panels that were originally installed without today's wind-load requirements.
Titusville sits on Florida's Space Coast - on the Atlantic side of the state, directly across the Indian River from Kennedy Space Center. That position means Brevard County is in a coastal wind zone, and the Florida Building Code requires that new sunroom windows and structures here meet higher wind-resistance standards than what you would find in inland Florida communities. The City of Titusville Building Division handles permits for residential additions within city limits, and those requirements reflect the genuine storm exposure that Titusville homeowners face every hurricane season from June through November.
Our crew works throughout Titusville regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Titusville is Brevard County's county seat, and residential additions within city limits are permitted through the City of Titusville Building Division - a process we navigate on every project we build here. The city covers a wide area from the older neighborhoods near the Indian River waterfront in the east to the newer subdivisions out toward Interstate 95 in the west, and the homes we work on in each part of the city are genuinely different in age, construction type, and condition.
The neighborhoods near Space View Park and downtown are some of the most distinctive in Brevard County - it is one of the few places in the country where you can watch a rocket launch from your own neighborhood. The homes closest to the Indian River deal with salt air and moisture pressure that is closer to a coastal beach community than a Central Florida inland town. Moving west along State Road 50, the newer subdivisions near I-95 are standard Florida CBS construction that was built in the 1990s and 2000s and holds up differently than the mid-century stock near the water.
We also serve Sanford to the northwest - another community with a strong historic housing stock and a mix of older and newer construction that our crew knows well - as well as New Smyrna Beach to the north along the coast, where many homeowners face similar salt-air and humidity conditions as Titusville properties near the water.
Call us or fill out the online form and we respond within one business day. We ask about the existing patio or enclosure, the approximate size, and your goals for the space so we come to the site visit fully prepared.
We visit your Titusville property, assess the existing slab condition, check how the structure connects to the home, and evaluate any moisture or drainage issues. You receive a fixed written estimate covering all materials, labor, and permit fees - so the number you approve is the number you pay.
We submit the permit application to the City of Titusville Building Division and order materials during the review period. Titusville permit review typically takes two to three weeks - we use that window so there is no additional wait once approval comes through.
Construction for most Titusville patio conversions and screen rooms takes two to four weeks depending on scope. We coordinate all required city inspections during the build and hand over the completed permit record when the project is done - documentation that stays with the home.
We serve Titusville homeowners throughout Brevard County - from the older neighborhoods near the Indian River to the newer subdivisions off Interstate 95. Contact us for a free on-site estimate with no pressure and no obligation.
(386) 278-1903Titusville is the county seat of Brevard County, positioned on the western shore of the Indian River Lagoon directly across the water from Kennedy Space Center. The city has about 46,000 residents and a character shaped by decades of aerospace employment - NASA, SpaceX, Boeing, and their contractor networks are the largest employers in the area, and many residents have worked in or around the space program for their entire careers. That stability shows in the housing stock: most of the single-family homes in Titusville are concrete block ranches built between the 1950s and the 1980s when the Space Age brought rapid growth to Brevard County. Neighborhoods like La Cita and Sherwood Park represent the established residential areas that grew up alongside the space program, while the properties along the Indian River waterfront offer views that most Florida communities cannot match.
The eastern part of the city borders the Indian River Lagoon and Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, one of the most biodiverse coastal habitats in the country - and a major reason why living near Titusville means dealing with wildlife, moisture, and salt air that inland Florida homeowners simply do not face. To the east across the lagoon lies Canaveral National Seashore, one of the last undeveloped stretches of Atlantic beach on Florida's coast. The western part of the city stretches toward Interstate 95, where newer subdivisions built in the 1990s and 2000s house residents who moved to the area more recently. Adjacent Sanford to the northwest is another Seminole and Volusia County community with a strong mid-century housing stock where we do regular sunroom work, making the two cities natural companions in terms of the kinds of projects our crew encounters.
Titusville homeowners trust TrueView Daytona Beach Sunrooms for patio conversions, screen enclosures, and sunroom additions built to Brevard County code. Call us today or request a free estimate - we respond within one business day.