
Mosquitoes and no-see-ums keep most Miami Lakes homeowners indoors after dark. A properly built screen room removes that barrier - so your patio, pool, or yard becomes a space you actually live in every evening of the year.

Screen room installation in Miami Lakes means building an aluminum-framed enclosure with fine-mesh screening on all sides, anchored to an existing slab or a new concrete pour - most installations take one to three days of on-site work once materials are on-site and permits are approved, with a total project timeline of four to eight weeks when permit review is included.
In Miami Lakes, mosquitoes and no-see-ums are active every month of the year - not just in summer. That makes a screen room less of a seasonal luxury and more of a practical necessity for anyone who wants regular outdoor time. A well-built screen enclosure gives you the air, the light, and the view of your yard while keeping insects and light rain out. It is the outdoor-living upgrade that fits South Florida's climate better than a fully enclosed glass room, which traps heat and requires air conditioning to be comfortable. If you want something that steps further toward an enclosed room, our patio enclosures service covers that transition.
We handle the full project from design through permit and inspection - including any HOA architectural review your neighborhood requires. Call us or submit the form below and we will come measure your space at no cost.
If mosquitoes and no-see-ums keep you inside in the evenings - which in Miami Lakes means most of the year - a screen room removes that barrier entirely. The bugs that make an open patio unusable after sunset are a year-round reality here, not a summer problem. Fine-mesh screen tight enough to block no-see-ums makes the difference between outdoor evenings you enjoy and ones you abandon.
A screened enclosure around a pool dramatically reduces the leaves, seed pods, and wind-driven debris that South Florida trees deposit into the water year-round. Less debris means less time skimming and fewer chemical adjustments - and the pool stays genuinely inviting rather than something you have to clean before every swim.
A screen room gives children and pets a secure, defined outdoor area where they can be outside without wandering, without bug bites, and with some relief from the intense South Florida sun. For families who want outdoor time without constant perimeter supervision, it is one of the most practical upgrades available.
If you already have a covered patio or lanai that is open on the sides, adding screen panels is the natural and cost-efficient next step. The covered roof is already there - screen turns the space from something you tolerate into something you use. The difference in daily livability in this climate is meaningful.
We build screen rooms on existing concrete slabs as well as new pours, and we install freestanding enclosures as well as those that attach to your home's exterior wall. The frame is aluminum, powder-coated for rust and fade resistance in South Florida's salt-influenced air. Screen mesh options range from standard insect screen to fine-mesh no-see-um panels and heavy-gauge pet-resistant screen - the right choice depends on what you are keeping out and what your budget is. All structures are engineered to meet Miami-Dade County's wind-resistance requirements and come with the permit and inspection that confirms that compliance. Homeowners who later want more weather protection from rain and cold can step up to a patio-to-sunroom conversion, which builds on the screen room structure.
We also handle add-ons at installation time that cost far less than retrofitting later: ceiling fan electrical rough-ins, decorative screen doors, and screened roof panels that keep overhead debris out. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we prepare the architectural review package and submit it on your behalf - the same way we handle the county building permit. Miami Lakes homeowners who want a full glass enclosure rather than a screen room should look at our patio enclosures page, which covers the range from screen to glass options.
Best for homeowners with an existing covered patio who want to add screen panels and a roof system using the current concrete slab as the foundation.
Best for homeowners who do not have an existing slab and want a complete installation from the concrete pour through the finished screen enclosure.
Best for homeowners who want to enclose an existing pool area to reduce debris, insects, and sun exposure, making the pool genuinely easier to maintain and more enjoyable to use.
Best for homeowners whose property sees heavy no-see-um activity and who want screening fine enough to block these tiny insects while maintaining good airflow.
Miami Lakes sits in Miami-Dade County, where biting insects are active every month of the year and hurricane season runs June through November. Both of those facts shape every screen room we build here. Standard insect screen mesh that works fine in most of the country has openings large enough for no-see-ums to pass through - a detail that matters enormously in South Florida, where those tiny biting midges are as much of a nuisance as mosquitoes. And Miami-Dade County requires screen enclosures to meet some of the most demanding wind-resistance engineering standards in the United States, which affects the gauge of aluminum framing we use and the anchoring method into the slab. Homeowners in Miramar and Pembroke Pines face the same county-level wind requirements, and we build to those standards across our entire service area.
Miami Lakes is also a planned community with active HOAs in many of its neighborhoods, and many of those associations have architectural review requirements before any permanent exterior structure can be built. That means before we start framing, there are often two separate approval processes running: the county permit and the HOA submission. The town sits on very flat terrain with a naturally high water table, so when a new concrete slab is needed, we design the grading and drainage carefully - water that pools against the slab base accelerates aluminum corrosion over time, and that is something a contractor unfamiliar with South Florida conditions often misses.
The National Sunroom Association (NSA) sets industry standards for screen enclosures and sunroom construction nationwide - membership is one signal that a contractor takes professional standards seriously.
We visit your home, measure the space, assess the existing slab or determine whether a new one is needed, and walk you through screen type, door placement, roof options, and any add-ons. We reply within one business day of your inquiry and typically schedule the site visit the same week.
After the site visit you receive a written estimate with a clear scope and pricing. Once you sign, we submit the permit application to Miami-Dade County with engineered drawings showing the structure meets wind-load requirements. If your neighborhood requires HOA approval, we prepare and submit that package in parallel to avoid adding weeks to your schedule.
If a new concrete slab is needed, we pour and grade it first - including proper drainage design for Miami Lakes' flat terrain. If you have an existing slab, we inspect it for level and condition before anchoring the frame. Clear furniture and potted plants from the work zone before the crew arrives.
The aluminum frame goes up, screen panels are stretched and fastened, and doors are hung and adjusted - typically one to two days for a residential screen room. The county inspector then verifies the work. We do a final walkthrough with you to confirm every panel is taut, all doors latch cleanly, and the frame is undamaged before we close out the project.
We come to your home at no cost, measure your space, and give you a written estimate with clear pricing. No pressure, no obligation.
(786) 905-1635Every frame we install is engineered to Miami-Dade County's wind-resistance standards - the same standards that govern construction in one of the most hurricane-tested counties in the country. We submit engineered drawings with the permit application, and our structures pass inspection the first time because they are built to the right spec from day one.
Standard insect screen is not fine enough to stop no-see-ums, which are a year-round problem in Miami Lakes. We stock and install fine-mesh screen on every project where the customer asks for it - and we always raise the option because most homeowners do not realize standard mesh will not stop the insects they are most bothered by.
Florida requires a state contractor's license for screen enclosure work, and you can verify ours at any time through the Florida DBPR licensing portal. We pull every permit and schedule every inspection - you do not have to manage any part of the regulatory process yourself.
Many Miami Lakes neighborhoods require HOA architectural review before any permanent structure is built. We have prepared and submitted these packages for homeowners across the community - we know what the typical HOA requests, and we file both the county permit and the HOA submission in parallel to keep your project on the fastest possible timeline.
These are not generic talking points - they come from years of working specifically in Miami-Dade County, where the insect reality, the wind code, and the HOA landscape are all different from anywhere else. When you work with us, you get a team that already knows what your project requires here.
Want to step up from a screen room to a fully enclosed glass room? Our patio-to-sunroom conversion service handles that transition with full permit and HOA support.
Learn MoreExplore the range from screened panels to glass-wall enclosures - a good reference if you are deciding between a screen room and something more fully enclosed.
Learn MorePermit season books up fast - reach out now so we can schedule your site visit and get your project in the queue before the busy season fills out.