
EnclosePro Alafaya Sunrooms & Patios serves Oviedo with four season sunrooms, custom additions, and patio enclosures. Licensed and insured in Florida, pulling permits through the city, and responding within 1 business day.

Oviedo's combination of intense summer heat and brief winter cold snaps means a screened porch is comfortable for only a few months of the year. A four season sunroom is fully insulated and connected to your home's HVAC, so it stays comfortable in July's humidity and through January's occasional frost.
Many Oviedo homes were built between the 1980s and early 2000s with screened lanais that are now showing their age - bent frames, failing screens, and concrete slabs that have shifted in the sandy soil. A proper sunroom addition replaces that aging structure with a real room that adds conditioned square footage and holds up through storm season.
HOA communities are common throughout Oviedo - Alafaya Woods, Twin Rivers, and Remington Park all have exterior guidelines that govern additions. A custom sunroom designed to match your existing roofline, exterior color, and material choices satisfies your HOA and keeps the neighborhood look consistent.
Oviedo's daily summer thunderstorms soak open patios and push water into uncovered lanai areas. Enclosing your patio with solid walls and a properly flashed roof edge keeps the space dry, extends the life of your outdoor furniture, and removes the annual storm damage cycle from your to-do list.
Oviedo has many homes with pool decks and lanais that need fresh screen enclosures after years of UV exposure and storm wear. A properly framed and anchored screen room handles the wind loads from seasonal storms and keeps insects out during the long mosquito season that runs nearly year-round here.
Sandy soil in Seminole County causes concrete slabs to settle unevenly over time, which shows up as cracked or uneven patio surfaces. A conversion project addresses the slab and turns the existing footprint into fully enclosed living space without requiring an entirely new foundation pour.
The bulk of Oviedo's housing stock was built during the suburban growth boom from roughly 1985 to 2005, putting a large share of homes at 20 to 40 years old. At that age, original screened enclosures and patio structures are commonly past their designed lifespan. Florida's concrete block construction is durable, but stucco exteriors crack as the heat and humidity cycle through them, screen frames corrode, and pool deck concrete shifts as the sandy Seminole County soil settles beneath it. A contractor who has worked on these homes before - not just newer construction - will assess the existing structure accurately before quoting any conversion or addition project.
Oviedo's climate creates specific demands on any outdoor structure. The city averages over 230 sunny days per year, and that UV exposure degrades exterior coatings, roofing membranes, and window seals faster than most homeowners expect. Summer brings daily afternoon thunderstorms from June through September, and tropical systems occasionally push damaging wind and rain through Seminole County even without a direct landfall. Florida's building code requires new additions to meet specific wind-resistance standards, and city inspectors check for this at every stage. Getting the framing, roofing, and window specifications right from the start is not optional - it is what separates a structure that holds up from one that fails in the first serious storm.
Our crew works throughout Oviedo regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the City of Oviedo Building Division and are familiar with the plan review process and inspection requirements specific to this municipality. We also work regularly in Oviedo's HOA communities - Alafaya Woods, Twin Rivers, Remington Park, and others - and know how to prepare exterior design proposals that meet community guidelines before they go to the city for permit review.
Oviedo is a city with a strong local identity. Downtown Broadway Street and Oviedo on the Park serve as the community's social center, and the neighborhoods surrounding the city range from established subdivisions near Seminole State College to newer developments along the SR 417 corridor. We work across all of these areas and understand the mix of lot sizes, slab configurations, and HOA structures that each part of the city has.
We also serve neighboring communities when projects take us across the city line. If you are in Winter Springs to the west or bordering areas to the south, we handle those projects with the same approach - full permits, written proposals, and honest pricing before any work begins.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form and we will follow up within one business day. We will ask a few quick questions about your space and schedule your on-site visit at a time that works for your schedule.
We visit your Oviedo home, measure the space, and look at the existing structure. This is where we talk through cost ranges honestly, based on what your specific home and slab situation actually requires - not a number pulled from a national average.
After you approve the written proposal, we handle the city permit application and your HOA submission if your neighborhood requires one. You do not have to navigate those processes - we manage them on your behalf and keep you updated on timing.
Construction runs in stages from foundation through finish work. Once the city final inspection passes, we walk you through the completed space and hand over all documentation before closing out the project.
We serve Oviedo homeowners with no-pressure estimates and clear written proposals. Reach out and we will respond within 1 business day.
(407) 738-4742Oviedo is a city of about 40,000 people in Seminole County, located just east of Orlando. It is widely recognized in the metro area as a quieter, family-oriented community with strong homeownership rates, good schools, and a local identity built around its downtown Broadway Street corridor and the mixed-use Oviedo on the Park development. Median home values sit around $400,000 or higher, reflecting the city's appeal to working families and long-term residents who invest in their properties. The city is also known for a quirky local character - a flock of wild chickens that has roamed downtown Oviedo for decades, recognized by nearly every resident.
Most of Oviedo's housing stock was built between 1985 and 2005, in planned subdivisions many of which are governed by HOAs. Communities like Alafaya Woods, Twin Rivers, and Remington Park represent the typical Oviedo neighborhood - single-family homes on modest lots, with screened lanais and pool decks that are common to Florida suburban construction of that era. The housing mix is predominantly owner-occupied, and residents here tend to stay long enough to invest in additions and upgrades. We serve Oviedo homeowners throughout the city, including those near the border with Alafaya to the south and communities edging toward Casselberry to the west.
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 Oviedo and the surrounding Seminole County communities. Call now or send a message and we will respond within 1 business day with clear pricing and no pressure.