
EnclosePro Alafaya Sunrooms & Patios builds enclosed patio rooms, screen enclosures, and sunroom additions for Kissimmee homeowners - from lakefront properties near East Lake Tohopekaliga to HOA communities throughout Osceola County. We handle permits and respond within 1 business day.

Kissimmee's summer heat and near-daily afternoon rain make open patios unusable for months at a time. Our enclosed patio rooms convert that exposed slab into a weather-protected living space built to Florida Building Code wind standards, so you get a room your family actually uses year-round.
Kissimmee is surrounded by lakes and wetlands, and the mosquito pressure from late spring through fall is significant. A properly built screen enclosure is the most direct way to reclaim outdoor living space without ongoing chemical treatments, and we install Florida-rated systems with aluminum framing built to current Osceola County wind codes.
Many Kissimmee homes have rear patios that were built with the house but never enclosed, leaving them exposed to the heavy thunderstorms that characterize the rainy season from June through September. A patio enclosure makes that space usable and meets the Florida Building Code structural requirements that apply throughout Osceola County.
Adding a permitted sunroom to a Kissimmee home increases livable square footage and creates a room that connects interior space to the Florida landscape without the heat, insects, and rain exposure of a fully open patio. We design additions around your existing floor plan and handle all city and county permit requirements.
Kissimmee's summers are long, hot, and humid - a room without climate control is not realistic from May through October in this part of Florida. A four season sunroom ties into your existing HVAC and uses low-e glass to hold back heat gain, giving you a comfortable, usable room all twelve months of the year.
A large share of Kissimmee homes have original concrete patio slabs that currently see minimal use because they are too exposed to the elements. Converting that existing slab into a fully enclosed sunroom uses the foundation already in place and turns neglected outdoor space into a room with real everyday value.
Kissimmee sits in a lake-rich landscape - East Lake Tohopekaliga, Lake Tohopekaliga, and numerous smaller water bodies surround and run through the city. That proximity to water affects ground moisture levels, raises humidity in the air, and makes pest pressure - especially mosquitoes - a practical concern for any homeowner with an outdoor living space. The housing stock in Kissimmee spans a wide range: older concrete block homes in established neighborhoods near the downtown waterfront, mid-century construction in residential areas off U.S. 192, and a very large inventory of newer HOA-governed communities built from the 1990s through the present. Each of those building eras and community types creates different conditions for enclosure and sunroom work. HOA communities have their own approval processes that run parallel to the city and county permit process, and a contractor unfamiliar with that added layer will create delays and complications for you.
Florida Building Code wind-resistance requirements apply throughout Osceola County, and they are the baseline standard for any permitted structure. Beyond code, Kissimmee's intense summer UV and humidity mean that materials selection matters for longevity - aluminum framing with proper coatings, high-grade screen mesh, and properly sealed roofline connections all affect how long an enclosure performs before needing significant maintenance. An older screen enclosure in Kissimmee that was built before current code standards is typically showing its age in visible ways: oxidized frames, broken mesh, leaning posts. We replace those with systems built to last under current Florida conditions.
Our crew works throughout Kissimmee regularly, and we understand the permit process at both the City of Kissimmee Building Division and the Osceola County Building Division for properties outside city limits. One of the practical realities in Kissimmee is that many homeowners are also dealing with HOA submittal requirements on top of the governmental permit process - we are familiar with the typical submittal packages those communities require and can help you understand what documentation is needed.
Kissimmee's main corridors - U.S. 192 to the south of downtown, the Osceola Parkway running east toward St. Cloud, and the older streets around Monument Avenue and Emmett Street - give the city a diverse character that ranges from tourist-adjacent commercial zones to quiet residential neighborhoods with older homes. We work in all of those areas and see the full range of housing stock, from original concrete block ranch houses built in the 1960s and 1970s to newer tract construction in planned communities like Celebration and Kissimmee's many newer subdivisions east of the Florida Turnpike.
We also serve the neighboring community of St. Cloud to the southeast, and we regularly take projects in Orlando to the north. The same crew and permit process applies.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form. We reply to all Kissimmee-area inquiries within one business day and schedule a site visit at a time that works around your schedule.
We visit your Kissimmee property, assess the existing slab and structure, verify whether city or county permit applies, and identify any HOA submittal requirements. You get a written estimate before any commitment - no pressure.
We submit permit applications to the City of Kissimmee or Osceola County and schedule construction once approval is issued. You do not need to be home for most phases, but we keep you updated throughout.
The project closes with a final city or county inspection. We provide the inspection certificate so your homeowners insurer and any future buyer have the complete permit record.
We serve Kissimmee and Osceola County. Free site visit, written estimate, no obligation. Call or submit the form below.
(407) 738-4742Kissimmee is the county seat of Osceola County and sits on the northern shore of Lake Tohopekaliga, one of the largest lakes in Central Florida. The city has a compact historic downtown along Emmett Street and Monument Avenue with older commercial and residential buildings, and a broader residential area that extends across a wide mix of neighborhoods. U.S. Highway 192 running east-west through the city connects Kissimmee to the major tourist corridor to the west and to St. Cloud and eastern Osceola County. The Florida Turnpike runs north-south through the area, linking Kissimmee to Orlando above and to the Treasure Coast below. Kissimmee is one of the faster-growing communities in Central Florida, with a large number of newer planned communities alongside the older residential stock near the lakefront.
The residential character of Kissimmee is defined in part by its large HOA-governed community inventory. Neighborhoods from the 1990s onward are commonly governed by homeowners associations with design standards that affect exterior modifications including sunrooms and enclosures. Older neighborhoods near downtown and along the lakefront have more traditional single-family housing without HOA oversight, which means a more straightforward path to permit approval. The combination of lake proximity, high humidity, and intense UV makes outdoor structures in Kissimmee a real maintenance challenge if they are not built to current Florida standards. Nearby St. Cloud shares the same lakeside landscape and Osceola County conditions, and we serve both communities with the same crew and permitting knowledge.
Keep bugs out while enjoying fresh air with a quality screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreFrom lakefront properties to HOA communities, we design and build the right enclosure for your Kissimmee home. Reach out now before summer project slots fill.