
Bonita Springs Lanai Sunrooms & Patios installs screen rooms, patio enclosures, and sunrooms for Fort Myers Beach homeowners. We know Estero Island conditions - salt air, elevated homes, and current Lee County codes after Hurricane Ian.

Estero Island homes deal with insects and afternoon sun that make outdoor time uncomfortable without protection. Screen room installation is the most popular way Fort Myers Beach homeowners reclaim their porches and lanai spaces, and we build each enclosure to handle the salt air that eats through standard materials here.
Fort Myers Beach patios take a beating from Gulf-side humidity and salt exposure year-round. A properly framed patio enclosure with corrosion-resistant aluminum gives you a protected outdoor space that holds up in this environment without constant upkeep.
For Fort Myers Beach vacation rental owners, a glass-enclosed sunroom adds interior living space that guests can use even when afternoon storms roll in from the Gulf. It is one of the upgrades that consistently shows up as a differentiator for short-term rentals on Estero Island.
Fort Myers Beach sees near year-round warmth, but summer humidity and heat make an unconditioned space uncomfortable for months. An all season room with insulated panels and HVAC connection keeps the space livable whether it is July or January without running up energy costs unnecessarily.
Vinyl frames resist the salt corrosion that destroys standard metal components on Fort Myers Beach, making them a smart long-term choice for homes on or near the water. They require almost no maintenance, which matters when your home may sit unoccupied for part of the year.
Many Fort Myers Beach homes rebuilt after Hurricane Ian now have elevated foundations with ground-level or first-floor patio space that owners want enclosed. We work with elevated home designs throughout Estero Island and know how to frame an enclosure that matches the structure properly.
Fort Myers Beach sits on Estero Island, a Gulf barrier island where salt air, flood risk, and hurricane exposure shape every building decision. Most properties here fall within FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas, which means permit requirements, foundation standards, and structural rules are stricter than they are just a few miles inland. After Hurricane Ian made landfall nearby in September 2022, Lee County updated its building codes to reflect new flood elevation requirements - many homes now need to be rebuilt or enclosed to current standards, not the ones that applied when they were first built. A contractor unfamiliar with these rules can create compliance problems that cost homeowners far more to fix than the original job.
The physical environment here is equally demanding. Salt air on a Gulf barrier island corrodes standard aluminum frames, metal fasteners, and screen mesh at a pace homeowners inland simply do not experience. Materials that last 20 years in a typical Florida suburb may show significant wear in 10 to 12 years on Estero Island without the right product choices from the start. A large share of Fort Myers Beach homes are vacation rentals or seasonal residences, which means maintenance issues can go unnoticed for months. Choosing materials and construction methods that hold up with minimal attention is not a nice-to-have here - it is part of building smart on this island.
Our crew works throughout Fort Myers Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. We pull permits through the Lee County Development Services building division, and we are familiar with the updated flood elevation and wind resistance requirements that came into effect after Ian. If your home was rebuilt or elevated on pilings, we have worked on that type of structure and know how to frame a screen room or enclosure that attaches correctly to pile-supported construction.
Fort Myers Beach homes are spread along Estero Boulevard from the busy north end near Times Square down to the quieter neighborhoods near Lovers Key State Park. We work on homes all along the island, from small seasonal cottages to larger waterfront properties. The mix of older concrete block homes from the 1960s and 1970s - some of which survived Ian with damage rather than total loss - and newer elevated builds after the storm means we encounter a wide range of structural situations on the same block.
We also serve homeowners in nearby Cape Coral and Fort Myers, so our crews move through this corridor of Lee County regularly and can schedule Fort Myers Beach jobs without a long wait.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will respond within one business day. We ask a few basic questions about your home - the size of the space, whether the home is elevated, and what you are hoping to accomplish.
We come to your Fort Myers Beach home, measure the space, and assess the structure. This is where we talk through material choices suited for the salt environment, walk you through what permits are required, and give you a written quote before any commitment is made.
We submit the permit application to Lee County Development Services and schedule your installation once it is approved - typically one to two weeks from submission. We coordinate all of this and keep you updated so you know exactly when the crew will arrive.
Our crew completes the installation, typically in three to seven business days depending on the scope. We do a final walkthrough with you to confirm everything is right, and we do not consider the job done until you are satisfied with the result.
We serve Fort Myers Beach and all of Estero Island. Get a free, no-obligation estimate and a clear written quote before any work begins.
(239) 317-8970Fort Myers Beach is a small barrier island community in Lee County built along Estero Island, a narrow strip of land between the Gulf of Mexico and Estero Bay. With a permanent population of around 6,000 to 7,000 people, the town runs from the busy commercial strip at its north end - anchored by the pedestrian plaza near Times Square - down to quieter residential streets near Lovers Key State Park at the southern tip of the island. Estero Boulevard is the single main road connecting the whole community, and nearly every home on the island is within a short distance of the water on one side or the other. A large share of properties are vacation rentals, seasonal residences, or second homes, which gives the island a mix of tourist energy and quiet residential streets depending on the time of year.
The housing stock here spans several eras. Older homes from the 1960s through the 1990s were mostly concrete block construction, many of which sustained damage from Hurricane Ian in 2022. Since the storm, Fort Myers Beach has been in an active rebuilding phase, with many destroyed homes being replaced by newer structures built on pilings or elevated foundations to meet current FEMA flood elevation requirements. This post-Ian rebuild wave is expected to continue for several more years, making Fort Myers Beach one of the more active construction markets in Southwest Florida. Nearby communities we also serve include Estero just to the north across the bay, and Cape Coral across the Caloosahatchee River.
Keep bugs out and breezes in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a fully enclosed sunroom space.
Learn MoreSalt air, elevated homes, and updated codes after Ian require a contractor who knows the island. Call us today for a free estimate and get a written quote before any commitment.