
EnclosePro Alafaya Sunrooms & Patios builds sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for Deltona homeowners throughout Volusia County - from established lakeside neighborhoods to newer residential communities along the I-4 corridor. We handle permits and respond within 1 business day.

Deltona homeowners looking to add permanent, livable square footage to their home without the cost of a full stick-built addition are strong candidates for a permitted sunroom. Our sunroom additions are designed around your existing floor plan, connect to your home structurally, and are fully permitted through Volusia County - giving you space that adds real value to your property.
Most Deltona homes have rear patios that were built with the original construction but never enclosed, leaving them exposed to the heavy afternoon thunderstorms that move through the area from June through September. A patio enclosure converts that slab into weather-protected space and must meet Volusia County permit requirements for structural attachment and wind resistance.
Deltona has numerous lakes and retention ponds throughout the city, which keeps mosquito activity elevated for much of the warm season. A properly framed aluminum screen enclosure built to current Volusia County wind codes is the most direct way to reclaim outdoor space without chemical treatments or the cost of full enclosure.
Deltona summers are long and hot - daytime highs in the 90s from May through September make an uninsulated or un-cooled addition impractical for most families. A four season sunroom ties into your existing HVAC, uses low-e glazing to limit solar heat gain, and gives you a room that works every month of the year.
A large share of Deltona homes have original concrete slabs behind the house that see limited use because they are too exposed to the heat and rain. Using the existing slab as a foundation and building a fully enclosed room on top is cost-effective and avoids the expense of new foundation work.
Deltona's mild winter weather - temperatures rarely fall below 45 degrees from November through February - makes a three season room a practical option for families who want a comfortable outdoor-adjacent space without the cost of full year-round HVAC. Screened or jalousie-windowed walls let you enjoy the cooler months while keeping insects out.
Deltona is one of the largest cities in Volusia County by population, and it grew primarily through residential subdivision development from the 1960s through the 1980s - a legacy of the General Development Corporation planned community that originally developed the area. That history means a substantial portion of Deltona's housing stock consists of homes built in the 1970s and 1980s on the Florida clay and sand soils typical of this part of the state. Concrete block construction is the dominant building method, and the rear patios on many of these homes have been sitting exposed and underused for decades. Ground moisture fluctuation from the wet and dry seasons can affect older slab conditions, which is something we assess before committing to a conversion approach.
Florida Building Code wind-resistance requirements apply throughout Volusia County, and the area's position between the Atlantic coast to the east and the I-4 corridor means it sees the full range of Florida weather events. Materials that hold up here need proper UV resistance, sealed connections at the roofline, and aluminum framing with quality coatings. Older screen enclosures in Deltona that predate the post-2004 building code updates are often showing visible deterioration - oxidized frames, torn screen panels, and loose footings. Replacing those with code-compliant systems built for current wind exposure is a straightforward upgrade that significantly extends the useful life of the structure.
Our crew works throughout Deltona regularly and pulls permits through the Volusia County Building and Zoning Department, which is the governing permit authority for structural work in Deltona. One practical detail that affects Deltona jobs is the mix of older concrete block homes - many built in the 1970s and 1980s - alongside more recent construction, which means attachment methods and prep work can vary significantly from one property to the next.
Deltona's layout follows the original planned community grid, with Deltona Boulevard and Doyle Road serving as primary east-west corridors. The city is divided into numbered units - a relic of the original development plan - and homes in different units often show different construction eras and site conditions. The I-4 corridor runs through the southwestern portion of the city, and the community continues to see new residential growth in areas near Saxon Boulevard and the eastern sections of the city. We know the area and work throughout it regularly.
We also regularly serve neighboring Sanford, which sits just to the southeast in Seminole County, along with other communities throughout the greater Central Florida area. Homeowners along the Volusia-Seminole County border often ask us about coverage on both sides, and the answer is yes - we work in both jurisdictions.
Call or submit the online estimate form and we reply within 1 business day. We schedule a no-obligation site visit at a time convenient for you - no need to take time off work for the initial contact.
We visit your Deltona home, evaluate your existing slab and structure, and discuss what is realistic for your space and budget. You receive a written estimate with no obligation - we address cost questions directly at this stage so there are no surprises later.
We submit plans to Volusia County Building and Zoning and manage the permit process. Construction begins once approval is received - you do not need to be home for most of the build, and we keep you informed at each stage.
We coordinate the final building inspection and walk you through the finished space. You receive the signed inspection certificate - the document your insurance company needs to update your dwelling coverage to reflect the new addition.
We serve Deltona homeowners throughout Volusia County. Free estimates, permits managed, and a 1-business-day response on every inquiry.
(407) 738-4742Deltona is the largest city in Volusia County by population, with roughly 100,000 residents in a sprawling residential landscape west of DeLand and southwest of Daytona Beach. The city was developed as a planned retirement and family community starting in the 1960s, and that origin gives it a distinctive character: a large inventory of single-family homes on quarter-acre lots, dozens of small lakes and retention ponds scattered throughout the neighborhoods, and a housing stock that skews toward construction from the 1970s through the 1990s. Concrete block construction is the norm here, and the wide, flat lots make rear-yard sunroom and enclosure projects straightforward from a site-access standpoint. You can read more about the city at the Deltona, Florida Wikipedia article.
The city sits at a geographic crossroads between Volusia County to the north and Seminole County to the south. Neighboring Sanford, just across the county line in Seminole County, is a common destination for Deltona-area residents, and we serve both communities. The I-4 corridor connects Deltona southwest toward Orlando, making the area accessible for businesses based in the greater metro. Deltona homeowners looking to get more use out of their rear patios - whether by screening, enclosing, or converting to a full sunroom - have a clear return on that investment given how much of the year the weather keeps people indoors or fighting insects on an open patio.
Keep bugs out while enjoying fresh air with a quality screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreWe serve Deltona and the surrounding Volusia County area. Call or send a message and we will respond within 1 business day.