
Axis Davie Lanai Sunrooms & Patios has built patio enclosures, sunroom additions, and screen rooms for Pembroke Pines homeowners since 2017. We know city permitting, we work within HOA guidelines common to Pembroke Pines communities, and we reply within one business day.

Pembroke Pines homes sit on flat lots where afternoon rain in the summer has nowhere to go - and an open patio becomes unusable for hours at a time. A patio enclosure keeps your outdoor space functional through the wet season and lets you enjoy it year-round without letting the weather make that decision for you.
Many Pembroke Pines homes were built in the 1980s and 1990s, and the families who live in them now often need more usable space. A sunroom addition is one of the cleanest ways to expand a single-story concrete block home - you gain a real room without touching the interior.
Pembroke Pines families who want to be outside without battling mosquitoes or afternoon squalls find that a screen room strikes the right balance. It costs less than a fully enclosed room, it lets South Florida's winter breezes through, and it keeps the space usable during the most pleasant months of the year.
A climate-controlled, fully enclosed sunroom is the right choice for Pembroke Pines homeowners who want to use their addition during the peak of summer. With energy-efficient glazing and a dedicated mini-split system, these rooms stay comfortable even when the temperature outside pushes into the low 90s.
Vinyl frames hold up well in Pembroke Pines's humid, salt-influenced climate because they do not corrode or rust the way metal frames can over time. For homeowners who want a low-maintenance option that looks good year after year in South Florida conditions, vinyl is a practical choice.
Older screened enclosures in Pembroke Pines often have torn screens, corroded frames, or roofs that are no longer watertight after 20 or 30 years of South Florida weather. Remodeling an existing structure is usually faster and less expensive than building from scratch, and it gives you the chance to upgrade to current materials and wind-rated components at the same time.
Pembroke Pines is a city of planned residential communities, and most of those neighborhoods were built between 1980 and 2005. A large share of those homes now have aging screened enclosures or open patios that were never designed for the long South Florida exposure they have received. The combination of intense UV, high humidity, and annual hurricane season takes a real toll - screen frames corrode, roofing connections loosen, and glazing seals break down. Homeowners in Pembroke Pines who want to replace or upgrade those structures need a contractor who understands how those materials age in this specific climate, not one who is guessing.
HOA rules add another layer of complexity here that does not exist everywhere. Most planned communities in Pembroke Pines have covenants governing exterior additions - what materials are allowed, what colors are permitted, and how changes are approved. Getting city permits and HOA approval are two separate processes, and skipping either one creates problems after the work is done. A contractor who regularly works in Pembroke Pines neighborhoods already knows the common HOA requirements in this city and can help you navigate both tracks at the same time.
Our crew works throughout Pembroke Pines regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom and patio enclosure work here. We pull permits through the City of Pembroke Pines building department and know what drawings and documentation the city typically requires to move an application forward efficiently.
Pembroke Pines is a large city, and the conditions vary depending on where you are. The older eastern neighborhoods off Pines Boulevard have homes that were built first, and many of those properties have original screened enclosures or patios that are now 30 or more years old. The newer western communities near C.B. Smith Park were developed more recently, closer to the Everglades fringe, where soil and drainage conditions can differ from the eastern areas. We have worked in both parts of the city and know what to expect at each type of site.
We serve homeowners throughout this part of Broward County, including neighboring Miramar to the south and Davie to the north. If you are working with neighbors or family in those communities, the same team covers all of it.
Contact us by phone or through our contact form. We reply within one business day and set up a free on-site visit at a time that works for you. There is no cost and no obligation to get a full written estimate.
We visit your property, look at the space, and talk through your options. We ask about your HOA rules at this stage so the proposal we give you is already built around what is actually permitted in your community. Cost is addressed in writing before you commit to anything.
After you approve the proposal and sign the contract, we submit the permit application to the City of Pembroke Pines Building Division. We keep you informed on the review timeline and schedule your project start date once approval comes through.
We build your room to Florida wind-load and code requirements, schedule city inspections, and walk you through the finished space when it is done. You receive documentation showing the permit was closed and inspections passed.
We serve all of Pembroke Pines and the surrounding Broward County area. Free estimates, no pressure, and we respond within one business day.
(754) 243-8605Pembroke Pines is one of the largest cities in Broward County, with a population of well over 150,000 residents. The city grew rapidly from the 1970s through the early 2000s, transforming from largely open land into one of South Florida's most populated suburban communities. The result is a city of planned residential neighborhoods - most made up of single-family concrete block homes, townhomes, and condo communities - that feel distinctly suburban but hold a diverse population of families, retirees, and working adults who chose Pembroke Pines partly for its municipally operated charter school system, one of the largest of its kind in Broward County.
Pines Boulevard runs east to west through the city and is the main artery that most residents know best - lined with shopping centers, restaurants, and services. Interstate 75 runs along the western edge, connecting Pembroke Pines to Miami-Dade County to the south and the rest of Broward to the north. Homeowners here are neighbors with communities in Miramar to the south and Cooper City to the north, and the flat terrain and tropical climate that affect sunroom construction are the same across all three communities.
Keep bugs out and fresh air in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreCall or send us a message and we will respond within one business day. We cover all of Pembroke Pines and the surrounding Broward County communities.