
Bonita Springs Lanai Sunrooms & Patiosbuilds four-season sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms throughout the Village of Estero - all constructed to Florida impact standards and designed to meet HOA requirements in Estero's planned communities, with free in-home estimates and replies within one business day.

Estero summers run hot and humid from May through September - an uninsulated room is unusable for almost half the year. A four-season sunroom ties into your existing HVAC so the space works year-round, and it is engineered to Florida's impact requirements so your HOA approval process runs smoothly.
Nearly every single-family home in Estero has a screened lanai, and many of those structures were damaged or need re-screening after years of summer storms. A full patio enclosure gives you a weatherproof space without the cost of a climate-controlled room - a popular choice for homeowners who use their lanai mainly in the cooler season.
Mosquitoes and no-see-ums thrive near Estero Bay and the wetlands along Corkscrew Road. A screened room lets you enjoy the Gulf breeze without the bugs - and because most Estero homes were built in the 2000s, their original screen frames are now showing their age and due for replacement.
Homes built in Estero in the early 2000s are now old enough that their original lanai enclosures often have corroded frames, torn screens, and outdated materials that no longer meet current wind-load code. A remodel brings the space up to current standards and can add climate control if the original build did not include it.
Estero's gated communities - from Bella Terra to the Reserve at Estero - have strict architectural standards for exterior additions. A custom sunroom is designed from the start to match your roofline, stucco finish, and HOA color requirements, so approval goes through without revision requests.
Most Estero homes are single-family concrete block houses on lots large enough to accommodate a new room addition at the back or side. A sunroom addition permanently increases your home's conditioned square footage - a real benefit in a market where home values here are consistently above the Florida state average.
The Village of Estero sits in Lee County, a high-velocity hurricane zone under Florida building code. All sunroom additions and patio enclosures built here must use impact-resistant glazing and be framed to handle the wind loads required by the Florida Building Code. Estero is also close enough to the Gulf of Mexico and Estero Bay that salt air works on aluminum frames, metal fasteners, and screen mesh faster than in areas further inland. A contractor who spec's standard materials for a coastal job will hand you a structure that corrodes well before it should.
The second factor that shapes every job here is Estero's planned-community character. A large portion of the village's residential neighborhoods are governed by HOAs with architectural review boards, and those boards have real authority over what gets built. Exterior additions require written HOA approval before permits are pulled, and the approval package needs to include engineering drawings, material specifications, and color samples. Skipping that step or getting it wrong means delays that push a three-month project into five months. We know how the approval process works in Estero's communities because we have been through it many times.
Our crew works throughout the Village of Estero regularly, and since the village incorporated in 2014 we have been pulling permits directly through the Village of Estero Building and Inspections department rather than Lee County - a distinction that matters for scheduling, because the village operates its own review timeline. We know which Estero neighborhoods have the most active HOA architectural review boards and what those boards typically ask for in an approval submission.
The homes we see most often are concrete block houses in communities along Three Oaks Parkway, Corkscrew Road, and US-41. Coconut Point to the south acts as a navigation anchor for most of the area, and properties near the Estero Bay Preserve State Park on the western edge of the village deal with the most aggressive salt-air exposure. Hertz Arena on Estero Parkway marks the northern part of our typical work corridor here.
We also serve the towns directly adjacent to Estero. Homeowners in Fort Myers to the north contact us regularly, as do homeowners in Bonita Springs just to the south - so if you know someone in either area who needs sunroom work, we can help.
We reply within one business day. In the first conversation we ask about your space, preferred use, and rough budget so the on-site visit is focused and productive from the start.
We visit your home, measure the space, check roofline connections, and note any HOA or site conditions that affect scope. You receive a written quote within one to two weeks - no obligation to sign.
After you sign, we prepare engineered drawings for the Village of Estero building permit and the documentation package your HOA architectural review board requires. Plan two to six weeks for HOA approval and two to four weeks for permit review - we track both simultaneously.
Active construction typically takes three to seven weeks. We schedule required inspections and walk you through the finished space before we close out the permit.
We serve the Village of Estero and surrounding communities. Free in-home estimate, no obligation - we reply within one business day.
(239) 317-8970Estero is a village in Lee County that only became an officially incorporated municipality in 2014, making it one of the newer local governments in Florida. Despite being newly incorporated, the community itself has been growing rapidly since the 1990s and is now home to tens of thousands of residents - many of them retirees or second-home owners drawn by the Gulf Coast climate and proximity to both Fort Myers and Naples. The housing stock is overwhelmingly newer construction, with most homes built between 2000 and 2015. Single-family concrete block homes with tile roofs and screened lanais are the dominant property type. You can read more about the village's history and services at the Village of Estero official website.
Planned communities define Estero's residential character. Neighborhoods like Bella Terra, Wildcat Run, Fountain Lakes, and Rookery Pointe are gated and governed by HOAs with detailed exterior standards. Coconut Point mall serves as the commercial center for the area, and Hertz Arena brings events traffic to the Estero Parkway corridor. The Estero Bay Preserve State Park forms the western edge of the village, and homes near it face the highest salt-air exposure in the area. Neighbors looking for sunroom contractors in nearby communities often come to us from Fort Myers Beach and Bonita Springs, both of which we also serve.
Keep bugs out and breezes in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreCall us or submit the contact form - we serve the Village of Estero and reply within one business day. The sooner you schedule, the sooner your outdoor space starts working for you year-round.