
Axis Davie Lanai Sunrooms & Patios serves Miramar homeowners with four season sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms built for South Florida conditions. We have worked in Miramar subdivisions since 2017, we know the City of Miramar permit process, and we reply within one business day.

Miramar homes - built mostly in the 1990s and 2000s - often have backyard space that sits unused because heat and mosquitoes make it uncomfortable for most of the day. A four season sunroom with Low-E glazing and a dedicated mini-split gives you a fully air-conditioned room connected to your yard, comfortable even in July.
Many Miramar homes have existing concrete patios behind the house that go unused during the rainy season because there is nothing to keep the rain and bugs out. A patio enclosure transforms that existing slab into a true outdoor living room, usable through Miramar's wet season without a major footprint change to the home.
Miramar's mild winters make a screened room comfortable from October through April without any air conditioning. For homeowners who want to add outdoor living space at a lower cost than a fully enclosed room, a screen room delivers that breezy, open-air feel while keeping insects and wind-driven rain outside.
Miramar subdivisions use standard lot layouts, but the way each home is oriented and positioned on the lot varies. A custom sunroom is designed around your specific footprint, your existing roofline, and how the sun hits your backyard at different times of day - details that matter when you are trying to manage heat gain in a South Florida climate.
Miramar homeowners who need genuine year-round usability - not just a screened porch - benefit from a fully insulated all season room with climate control. These rooms function like any other room in the house, with no seasonal shutdowns or comfort trade-offs even during the hottest and most humid months of the year.
Miramar afternoons in summer are hot enough that an uncovered patio becomes unusable by midday. A solid or louvered patio cover drops the surface temperature significantly, protects outdoor furniture from UV damage and rain, and extends the usable hours of that space through much of the year without requiring a full enclosure.
Most of Miramar was built during a rapid suburban expansion that ran through the 1990s and 2000s, which means a large share of homes in the city are now 20 to 35 years old. Concrete block construction, tile roofs, and attached two-car garages are the standard here. Patios and backyard spaces were often built as simple slabs - functional but exposed. As these properties age, homeowners are increasingly looking to enclose or improve those outdoor spaces, and they need a contractor who works with CBS construction regularly, not one accustomed to wood-framed houses from other parts of the country.
Miramar also presents some of the same physical challenges as the rest of South Florida: flat, low-lying terrain with poor drainage, intense summer heat and humidity, and a hurricane season that runs from June through November. Any sunroom or enclosure built here must meet Broward County wind-load requirements, be waterproofed against heavy daily thunderstorms during the wet season, and be designed so water drains away from the slab rather than pooling against it. On top of that, a large share of Miramar's subdivisions are governed by HOAs with their own exterior rules, and a contractor who does not account for those restrictions early in the process can create expensive problems after work begins.
Our crew works throughout Miramar regularly, and the subdivision-style homes here - concrete block walls, tile roofs, modest backyard lots - are the kind of properties we work on every week. We know which neighborhoods sit closer to the western edge of the city near the Everglades, where drainage and high water tables require extra attention during slab prep, and which areas are more centrally located with fewer drainage complications.
Miramar Parkway and Pembroke Road are the main east-west corridors we navigate to reach job sites across the city, and we are familiar with the commercial and residential zones on both sides of those roads. The City of Miramar Building Division handles permit review for residential additions here, and we know what complete permit packages look like for this jurisdiction so applications do not come back with requests for more information.
We also serve neighboring Hollywood to the east and Pembroke Pines to the north, so if you have family or neighbors in those communities, the same local team handles all of it.
We reply within one business day to schedule a free on-site visit. There is no charge for the estimate and no obligation to commit on the spot.
We visit your Miramar property, review the space, and discuss the type of room you want. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we ask about it upfront and factor those rules into the proposal before you receive an itemized written cost breakdown.
Once you approve the proposal and sign the contract, we submit a complete permit application to the City of Miramar Building Division and schedule your project start date. We keep you updated while the permit is under review.
We build to Broward County wind-load and structural code standards, schedule all required inspections, and walk you through the finished room before closing out the job. You receive documentation showing the permit was closed and the work was inspected.
We serve all of Miramar, FL. Free estimates, no pressure, and we handle the permits so you do not have to.
(754) 243-8605Miramar is one of the largest cities in Broward County by land area, stretching roughly 14 miles from east to west in southwestern Broward. The city grew very quickly from the 1990s through the mid-2000s and transformed from a small town into a large suburban city during that period. Most of the housing stock consists of single-family homes inside planned subdivisions - concrete block construction, tile roofs, attached garages, and modest backyard lots. The western portion of the city borders the edge of the Everglades, giving some neighborhoods high water tables and drainage characteristics you do not find in other parts of Broward County. According to Wikipedia, Miramar is one of the most diverse cities in South Florida, with strong Caribbean-American and Hispanic communities and a long-term homeownership culture that reflects the city's stable residential character.
The city has real commercial anchors as well. Miramar Town Center serves as a civic and retail hub near the middle of the city, while the corridors along Interstate 75 on the western edge have developed into business parks and corporate campuses. Miramar Regional Park is a well-used public space with sports fields and an aquatic complex. The city sits between Pembroke Pines to the north and Hollywood to the east and northeast, and we serve all three communities with the same local crew.
Keep bugs out and fresh air in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreWe are a local crew that works in Miramar every week. Call today or submit a request and we will get back to you within one business day.