
EnclosePro Alafaya Sunrooms & Patios handles sunroom remodeling, screen enclosure replacement, and new sunroom additions for Altamonte Springs homeowners. We pull Seminole County permits, know the city's older housing stock inside and out, and reply within 1 business day.

Many Altamonte Springs sunrooms from the 1980s and early 1990s are showing their age - fogged glass panels, failing seals around frames, and aluminum that has oxidized past the point of repainting. Our sunroom remodeling service updates the structure to current Florida Building Code, replaces degraded glazing, and restores the space to a room that works year-round.
Altamonte Springs is home to Cranes Roost Lake and several smaller retention ponds, and the mosquito and no-see-um pressure near open water is significant from spring through fall. A properly installed screen enclosure lets you use your outdoor space without fighting insects all evening, and modern systems are rated for Florida wind loads to survive storm season.
Altamonte Springs sits in the heart of Central Florida's humid subtropical climate zone, where outdoor temperatures stay uncomfortable from May through October. A four season sunroom ties into your existing HVAC and uses energy-rated glass to control heat gain, giving you a fully conditioned room that is comfortable even when the heat index pushes past 105 degrees.
Altamonte Springs averages nearly 50 inches of rain per year, and summer afternoon thunderstorms arrive fast and drop a lot of water in a short time. A solid patio enclosure keeps your outdoor furniture and floor dry, meets Florida Building Code wind requirements, and turns a partially usable space into one you can count on through storm season.
A number of Altamonte Springs homes have concrete slabs at the rear that were poured when the house was built but never enclosed. Converting that existing slab into a conditioned sunroom avoids foundation costs and turns a space that currently sits empty for most of the year into a room with real daily value.
Altamonte Springs homes built in the 1970s and 1980s were laid out for that era's lifestyle and rarely included dedicated indoor-outdoor living space. Adding a sunroom extends the footprint of the house, adds conditioned square footage, and increases appraisal value in a city where buyers are looking for move-in-ready homes.
Altamonte Springs grew primarily during the 1970s and 1980s, when Seminole County was one of the fastest-growing counties in the state. The residential stock from that era is a mix of concrete block construction and wood-frame homes built during a period when energy codes were minimal and outdoor living spaces were an afterthought. Sunrooms and screen enclosures from that period are now between 35 and 50 years old, and the degradation shows up consistently: fogged or cracked glazing, oxidized aluminum frames, caulk joints that have long since failed, and structural attachments that no longer meet Florida Building Code requirements for wind loads. Remodeling or replacing these structures requires knowing how they were built and what the current code demands - two things that differ significantly from what was installed decades ago.
Climate is the other major driver. Altamonte Springs summers are long, humid, and hot - conditions that are hard on any outdoor structure and make unenclosed or poorly conditioned spaces impractical for most of the year. The city's proximity to several lakes and retention areas, including Cranes Roost Lake near the commercial center, means that moisture exposure is a constant factor for many properties. Concrete that stays damp, aluminum that oxidizes faster than expected, and framing that sees repeated expansion and contraction from daily temperature swings all make it important to use materials and installation methods matched to the actual conditions in this area.
Our crew works throughout Altamonte Springs regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Altamonte Springs for projects in this jurisdiction. Altamonte Springs handles its own building permits as an incorporated Seminole County city, which means the application goes to the city rather than the county building department. We know the local plan review process and prepare drawings to clear it without unnecessary revision cycles.
The city sits along SR-436 (Semoran Boulevard) and I-4, making it easily accessible from across the region. Most of the residential work we do in Altamonte Springs is in the neighborhoods east of I-4 and south of SR-434, where single-story homes from the 1970s and 1980s sit on lots with mature trees and rear concrete slabs that were poured when the houses were built. Cranes Roost Park is the heart of the community - a walkable lakeside area surrounded by a mix of condos and single-family homes that often benefit from screened outdoor living additions.
We also serve nearby communities along the Seminole County corridor. Homeowners in Casselberry to the south are within our regular service area, and we work in Winter Springs as well for homeowners along that part of the SR-434 corridor.
Call us or fill out the contact form and we reply within 1 business day. We gather basic details about your project - type of space, approximate size, and whether you have an existing slab or structure - so the site visit is focused.
We visit your Altamonte Springs home, measure the space, assess the existing structure, and check drainage and attachment points. The written estimate covers all work, permits, and materials - no hidden fees added later.
We submit permit applications to the City of Altamonte Springs and schedule construction to start after approval. You do not need to be home for most of the work, though we walk you through the space at key milestones.
We coordinate the final building inspection and walk you through the completed space before closing out the job. You receive copies of all permit documents for your records and for future home sale disclosure.
We serve Altamonte Springs homeowners with free on-site estimates and no-pressure conversations. Call or fill out the form and we will reply within 1 business day.
(407) 738-4742Altamonte Springs is a city of roughly 45,000 residents in the southwest corner of Seminole County, bordered by Casselberry to the east, Longwood to the north, and the city of Maitland to the south. The city developed primarily during the 1970s and 1980s suburban expansion and is one of the more densely developed communities in Seminole County, with a commercial spine along SR-436 and established residential neighborhoods behind it. Cranes Roost Park - a lakeside public space near the Altamonte Mall - serves as the city's central gathering point and reflects the mixed residential-commercial character of the area. The city can be found on the City of Altamonte Springs website, which also handles permit applications.
The housing stock is predominantly single-family homes built between 1965 and 1990, with a mix of concrete block and wood-frame construction. Lot sizes are modest by Seminole County standards, and rear yards are often the primary usable outdoor space. The city also has a significant concentration of townhomes and low-rise condominiums from the same era, though most of our work is on single-family properties. Homeowners in nearby Casselberry face similar building conditions and permit requirements, and we work across both cities as part of the same service corridor.
Keep bugs out while enjoying fresh air with a quality screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreSunroom remodeling and new enclosure work move fast when you call early in the season. Reach out now and we will get back to you within 1 business day.