
CityWorks Palm Coast Sunrooms is a sunroom contractor serving Daytona Beach, FL, specializing in screen room installation, patio enclosures, and sunroom additions - every project permitted through Volusia County and built for the salt air and storm exposure that homes in this area face, with same-business-day replies on all inquiries.

Screen rooms are one of the most popular projects in Daytona Beach because so many homes here have a back patio or slab that gets no use during the long rainy season - mosquitoes, afternoon storms, and direct heat make open outdoor spaces miserable from late spring through fall. A properly built screen room changes that immediately. Learn more about screen room installation and what the Volusia County permit process looks like for this type of project.
Daytona Beach's older concrete block homes - many built in the 1950s through the 1980s - typically have covered back patios that go unused because of heat and insects. Enclosing that slab with a screened or glass-panel system creates a livable space without adding a new foundation. We permit every patio enclosure through Volusia County and use materials rated for coastal wind exposure and salt air.
Some Daytona Beach homeowners want more than a screen room - they want a fully climate-controlled space they can use even on the hottest July afternoon. A sunroom addition with insulated walls, proper glazing, and a tie-in to your home's HVAC gives you that. Because Daytona Beach homes range from beachside cottages to inland ranch homes, the right design depends on your specific property and lot.
Daytona Beach has a significant retiree and long-term resident population - people who use their homes heavily year-round and want every square foot to be functional. A four season sunroom, fully insulated and connected to your existing HVAC, adds a room that stays comfortable through both the humid Florida summer and the occasional January cold snap that catches unprepared homes off guard.
A lot of Daytona Beach homes have existing Florida rooms or screen enclosures that date back to the 1970s or 1980s and are showing it - corroded aluminum frames, failing screen panels, and leaking roof-to-wall connections are all common. Rather than tearing everything out, a remodel can update the failing components, bring the structure up to current Volusia County wind code, and make the room usable again at a lower cost than full replacement.
Daytona Beach gets frequent afternoon thunderstorms during the summer rainy season - often daily from June through September. A solid patio cover keeps the rain off your slab and drops the temperature underneath enough to make the space genuinely comfortable. Insulated panel systems are permitted through Volusia County as attached structures and must meet coastal wind standards.
Most of Daytona Beach's housing stock was built between the 1950s and the 1980s - concrete block homes that are now 40 to 70 years old. At that age, original screen enclosures and Florida rooms often have deteriorated aluminum frames, missing or torn screen panels, and leaking roof connections that have allowed moisture into the wall assembly. Adding a new structure to an older CBS home requires a careful look at the attachment wall before any framing goes up. Homes on the beachside barrier island face the most aggressive salt air exposure - materials that hold up fine two miles inland corrode significantly faster when the property is within sight of the ocean.
Daytona Beach sits on flat, low-lying land between the Halifax River and the Atlantic, and a significant portion of the city falls within FEMA flood zones - particularly east of US-1 and near the waterway. Flat lots drain slowly, and standing water near a foundation after a summer storm is a common complaint in older residential neighborhoods. Any slab-on-grade sunroom addition in a flood zone area requires appropriate ground prep and sometimes additional drainage work to prevent long-term moisture problems. Hurricane season is a real planning factor here too: Volusia County was affected by Hurricane Matthew in 2016 and Hurricane Ian in 2022, and homeowners across the county saw firsthand which enclosures and additions survived and which ones did not.
Our crew works throughout Daytona Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Daytona Beach is part of Volusia County, and we pull permits through Volusia County Building and Code Administration for every Daytona Beach project. We know the review timelines, what the plan examiners look for on coastal wind zone submissions, and how to prepare applications so projects move through approval without unnecessary back-and-forth.
Daytona Beach is a city of distinct neighborhoods with very different housing characters. The beachside corridor along Atlantic Avenue and near the Daytona Beach Boardwalk has older, smaller homes and condos that face the highest salt air exposure. Moving west across the Halifax River toward Midtown and the neighborhoods around Daytona International Speedway, the homes are more mixed - ranch-style concrete block from the 1960s and 1970s alongside some newer construction. We approach each job differently based on where the property sits and what the home is built from.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Ormond Beach to the north and throughout the surrounding Volusia County communities, so if you have neighbors or family nearby looking for similar work, we cover those areas as well.
Call or submit the form and we will get back to you within one business day. We schedule a no-cost visit at your Daytona Beach property to see the space in person - the existing slab, the wall attachment points, and any site conditions like lot drainage or flood zone status that affect the scope.
After the visit, we provide a written, itemized quote covering materials, labor, permit fees, and any site prep required. If your home is near the beachside or the Halifax River, we will note the marine-grade material requirements and what they add to the cost - no surprises later.
Once you approve the quote, we submit the permit application to Volusia County and schedule your build around the approval. Construction on most screen rooms and enclosures takes two to six weeks. You do not need to be home every day - we coordinate access with you and keep you updated as work progresses.
We schedule and attend the Volusia County final inspection. After it passes, we do a walkthrough with you to confirm the finished room meets everything in the quote, explain any maintenance steps specific to Daytona Beach's climate, and hand over your permit documentation for your records.
We serve Daytona Beach homeowners from the beachside to the inland neighborhoods west of US-1. Call or fill out the form and we will respond within one business day - no pressure, no obligation.
(386) 529-0493Daytona Beach is a city of roughly 69,000 people and the largest city in Volusia County, situated on Florida's northeast Atlantic coast between the Halifax River and the ocean. It is best known nationally for the Daytona International Speedway - home of the Daytona 500 - and for Bike Week, the massive motorcycle rally held every March that draws hundreds of thousands of visitors. Behind the tourism identity, Daytona Beach is a working city with major employers including Halifax Health, one of the largest regional hospitals in Florida, and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, which brings a steady year-round population to the western part of the city. The surrounding communities of Ormond Beach to the north and Port Orange to the south are part of the same metro area and share similar housing and climate conditions.
The city is divided by the Halifax River, which separates the beachside barrier island from the mainland. The beachside strip along Atlantic Avenue near the Daytona Beach Boardwalk and pier has a mix of older cottages, condos, and commercial buildings - many from the mid-20th century - facing the highest salt air and storm exposure in the area. Inland neighborhoods like Midtown and the areas west of US-1 are more strictly residential, with a mix of postwar concrete block ranch homes and some newer construction. Much of the housing stock dates from the 1950s through the 1980s, and Volusia County has one of the highest concentrations of residents aged 65 and older in Florida - a community of long-term homeowners who know their properties well and invest in keeping them up.
Add beautiful, livable square footage to your home with a custom sunroom addition.
Learn MoreEnjoy your sunroom year-round with climate-controlled, fully insulated construction.
Learn MoreAn affordable enclosed space perfect for spring, summer, and fall living.
Learn MoreTransform your open patio into a comfortable, protected outdoor living area.
Learn MoreExpert construction from foundation to roof for lasting, quality sunrooms.
Learn MoreRefresh and upgrade your existing sunroom to modern standards and comfort.
Learn MoreKeep bugs out and breezes in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed, functional sunroom space.
Learn MoreTurn an underused deck into a beautiful enclosed room your family will love.
Learn MoreComfortable, insulated rooms designed to be enjoyed in any Florida weather.
Learn MoreFully enclosed patio rooms that blend indoor comfort with outdoor character.
Learn MoreGlass-enclosed solariums that flood your home with natural light year-round.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and protection for outdoor spaces.
Learn MoreProfessional design services to plan your perfect sunroom before construction begins.
Learn MoreCall us today or fill out the form - we work throughout Daytona Beach year-round and can schedule a no-cost site visit to give you a written quote before the next storm season arrives.