
Mosquitoes and afternoon heat should not keep you inside. We build screened-in porches and screened decks in Port Orange so you can actually enjoy the outdoor space you paid for.

Screened-in porches and screened decks in Port Orange give homeowners a bug-free, weather-buffered outdoor room, and most enclosure projects wrap up in three to seven working days once construction begins.
If your deck or patio sits empty most evenings because the mosquitoes near the Halifax River corridor make it miserable after 6 p.m., that is the problem a screened enclosure solves directly. Many homeowners in Port Orange already have a perfectly good deck - they just cannot use it without a screen. If your deck itself is worn out, we can pair the enclosure with a covered deck build so everything is handled in one project.
We handle the permit through the City of Port Orange Building Division, coordinate HOA approvals where needed, and build every enclosure to meet Florida's coastal wind requirements. You get a finished, inspected space - not a liability.
If your outdoor space is consistently unusable after sundown because mosquitoes and no-see-ums take over, that is the clearest signal a screened enclosure would change how you live. Port Orange's bug pressure near retention ponds, drainage swales, and the Halifax River corridor is year-round, not seasonal. Without screening, a beautiful deck becomes a space you look at but do not use.
Many Port Orange homes built in the 1980s and 1990s have concrete patios or wood decks that are now 25 to 40 years old. If you are already thinking about refreshing that space, adding a screened enclosure at the same time is far more cost-effective than running two separate projects. Your contractor can assess whether the existing slab or deck is sound enough to build on.
If you have a patio table, chairs, or a grill that sit covered and untouched for most of the year, the space needs to be transformed - not just furnished differently. A screened enclosure with a solid or shade-screen roof panel turns an exposed patio into a room you can actually use, and it protects the furniture you have already invested in.
Port Orange's humidity and frequent rain cause exposed concrete patios and wood decks to accumulate mold and mildew fast. If you are pressure-washing your patio every few months just to keep it presentable, adding a roof and screen enclosure reduces the direct rain and moisture exposure driving that cycle. A covered, screened space stays cleaner and needs less maintenance in this climate.
Our screened enclosure work covers two main paths. The first is adding a screen frame to an existing deck or concrete patio - the faster, more affordable route when your current structure is in solid shape. The second is building a new deck or concrete base first and then adding the enclosure on top, which makes sense when the existing slab is cracked, uneven, or simply too small. If you want to go further and add a full solid roof over the screened space, we can pair the enclosure work with our covered deck and patio cover services for a combined build. For homeowners who prefer open-air shade without full screening, our pergola installation service is another option worth comparing.
Every enclosure project includes a permit pulled through the City of Port Orange, construction built to Florida's coastal wind-load standards, and a final city inspection before we consider the job done. We also walk you through screen material options - standard fiberglass, sun-blocking solar screen, and pet-resistant screen - so you choose what fits your household, not just what is cheapest to install.
Best for homeowners with a solid existing structure who want to add screening without rebuilding the foundation underneath.
Best for homeowners whose current slab or deck is worn, cracked, or undersized and want everything refreshed at once.
Best for homeowners who want rain protection in addition to bug protection, turning the space into a true all-weather outdoor room.
Best for households with dogs or cats who push against or scratch standard screen panels, extending the enclosure's lifespan significantly.
Port Orange sits in Volusia County where year-round mosquito and no-see-um pressure - driven by retention ponds, drainage swales, and proximity to the Halifax River - makes an unscreened deck genuinely difficult to enjoy in the evenings for most of the year. On top of that, the city averages more than 230 sunny days per year and receives intense afternoon thunderstorms from June through September. Without shade and screening, an exposed patio alternates between baking heat and soaking rain. Homeowners in Palm Coast and New Smyrna Beach face the same conditions, but Port Orange's density of older slab-on-grade homes - many built in the 1980s and 1990s - means a large share of homeowners here already have a concrete patio or worn deck that is ready to become a screened enclosure.
Florida's coastal wind-load requirements add real engineering demands to screen enclosures in this area. The framing, fasteners, and anchoring system must be built to withstand hurricane-level wind speeds - which means a permitted enclosure in Port Orange costs more than a comparable build in a non-coastal state, but it also holds up far better when a storm rolls through. Planned communities throughout Port Orange - including Cypress Head, Spruce Creek, and Venetian Bay - often have HOA design guidelines governing enclosure style and color, so working with a contractor who already knows those processes saves you time and headaches.
We respond within one business day. Over the phone we will ask about the size of your space, whether you have an HOA, and what you want to use the space for - not to sell you something, but to make sure we are a good fit before driving out.
We come to your property, measure the space, check the condition of the existing deck or slab, and walk through your options. You receive a written estimate that breaks down every part of the project - not a single number with no detail.
We submit the permit application to the City of Port Orange Building Division, typically taking one to three weeks for approval. If your community requires HOA review, we help you prepare that submission so both approvals run as close to parallel as possible.
Construction typically takes three to seven working days. Once work is complete, the city sends an inspector to verify the enclosure meets local wind-load and structural standards. We coordinate that inspection and walk you through the finished space before calling the job done.
Free written estimate. No obligation. We handle the permit and HOA coordination for you.
(386) 400-1327Every screened enclosure project we build in Port Orange is permitted through the City of Port Orange Building Division before a single board goes up. That means a city inspector verifies the work meets local wind-load standards - and you have documentation that protects you at resale. A contractor who skips this step is handing you a liability.
Port Orange sits in a hurricane-prone coastal zone where screened enclosures must meet strict wind-speed engineering standards. We build every enclosure to those requirements - heavier-gauge hardware, proper anchoring, sealed connections at the house. Your enclosure is engineered to stay intact, not just look good on a calm day. For more detail on Florida's wind standards, see the{placeholder} Florida Building Commission at floridabuilding.org. Florida Building Commission.
We have worked in the planned communities throughout Port Orange - Cypress Head, Spruce Creek, Venetian Bay, and others - and we know which neighborhoods require HOA design review before a permit can even be pulled. We help you prepare that submission so you do not get a letter after the fact asking you to modify or remove the structure.
Standard fiberglass, solar-blocking screen, and pet-resistant screen are not the same product, and the right choice depends on how you use the space. We show you samples and explain the trade-offs before you sign anything. The University of Florida IFAS Extension documents how UV exposure affects exterior building materials in Florida - a useful independent reference edis.ifas.ufl.edu.
Permitting, HOA coordination, wind-load engineering, and clear communication on materials - these are the things that separate a screened enclosure that holds up from one that becomes a problem. That is the standard we hold every project to.
Add a solid or louvered roof over your outdoor space for full rain and sun protection without the screening.
Learn MoreOpen-air overhead structure that provides partial shade and defines your outdoor space without enclosing it.
Learn MorePermit slots and build calendars fill up fast before storm season - lock in your start date now and stop losing evenings to mosquitoes.