
PrimeLiving Largo Sunrooms serves Pinellas Park homeowners with sunroom additions, patio-to-sunroom conversions, and screen room installation - all fully permitted through Pinellas County and built to Florida hurricane wind standards. We reply within one business day.

Pinellas Park is packed with postwar ranch homes that still have their original open concrete slabs - useful in theory, but unpleasant most of the year because of summer heat and pests. A patio-to-sunroom conversion transforms that slab into a shaded, screened, or fully enclosed room without tearing up your existing foundation.
Gulf-side mosquitoes and no-see-ums are a daily reality in Pinellas Park from spring through fall, especially in the evenings. A properly installed screen room lets you use your outdoor space without constant pest pressure, and it costs less than a fully enclosed sunroom when outdoor air is what you actually want.
Many Pinellas Park homes built in the 1960s and 1970s have deteriorating aluminum screen frames and cracked stucco edges where an old enclosure used to be. Replacing a failed patio enclosure on these homes uses the existing slab footprint and restores both function and appearance without a full addition.
Pinellas Park is a fully developed city with almost no vacant land, which means homeowners expand their living space rather than move. A sunroom addition built onto the rear of a ranch home adds square footage that families actually use, and it is permitted, insurable, and adds real value to the property.
The Gulf Coast sun and humidity break down wood and standard aluminum frames faster than most homeowners expect. Vinyl sunroom frames resist salt-air corrosion, do not need painting, and hold up well in the heat-and-humidity cycle that Pinellas Park sees year after year without the maintenance burden of other materials.
A lot of Pinellas Park homes have Florida rooms or enclosed patios that were built 30 to 40 years ago and are now leaking, fogged, or falling apart at the seams. Remodeling the existing structure - replacing panels, resealing the roof connection, and upgrading frames - is often faster and more cost-effective than demolishing and starting from scratch.
Pinellas Park is a densely built postwar city, and the housing stock reflects that history. Most homes here were constructed between the late 1940s and the 1970s using concrete block - a building method that holds up well in Florida hurricanes but creates specific challenges for additions and enclosures. Anchoring a new roof structure to an existing CBS (concrete block stucco) wall requires different hardware and methods than wood-frame construction. A contractor who works here regularly knows how to do it correctly without compromising the existing structure.
The flat terrain throughout Pinellas Park also matters. Most lots sit just a few feet above sea level, and sandy soil drains slowly after the heavy afternoon thunderstorms that hit the area from June through September. Standing water near the foundation is common, and any slab or foundation work needs to account for drainage from the start. The Gulf Coast location also means salt air is a constant factor - it accelerates corrosion on aluminum frames and metal fasteners in ways that inland Florida does not. Choosing the right materials from the beginning is the only way to avoid early failures in this environment.
Our crew works throughout Pinellas Park regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. The vast majority of homes we work on are single-story CBS ranch houses with concrete slabs, and we have developed a consistent approach to anchoring and sealing on this type of construction that holds up in Pinellas County's wind zone.
Pinellas Park sits near the center of the Pinellas Peninsula, with US-19 and Park Boulevard serving as the main commercial corridors and residential streets running in grids off those roads. The city is surrounded on all sides by other municipalities - St. Petersburg to the south, Clearwater to the north - which means most homeowners here stay local for services rather than traveling far for estimates. We schedule all Pinellas Park appointments within the county to keep response times short. The Pinellas Park Performing Arts Center area and the residential streets near Helen Howarth Park are neighborhoods we serve regularly.
We also work across the border in neighboring Seminole and throughout St. Petersburg to the south. If your project is near the Pinellas Park boundary with either city, we can handle it without any change in process or pricing.
Call or fill out the contact form and we will follow up within one business day. You do not need drawings or measurements at this point - a general description of the project and your address is enough to get started.
We visit your Pinellas Park property, check the existing slab condition, measure the space, and identify any drainage or setback issues. The estimate is written, itemized, and provided at no cost - no commitment required before you see the numbers.
We submit the permit application to the Pinellas County Building Department and schedule construction once approval is received - typically two to four weeks. You do not need to manage any of the permit paperwork; we handle it from submission through final inspection.
After the county inspector approves the final stage, we walk through the completed room with you and confirm everything meets the agreed scope. You receive copies of the permit and inspection records for your home files.
We serve all of Pinellas Park, handle permits through Pinellas County, and provide free written estimates with no pressure and no surprise costs.
(727) 766-0157Pinellas Park is a mid-sized city covering about 15 square miles near the center of the Pinellas Peninsula, with a population of roughly 55,000 residents. It is one of the more densely populated cities in Pinellas County and is almost entirely built out - there is very little open land left, so nearly all construction here involves existing homes rather than new builds. The housing stock is dominated by single-story concrete block ranch homes constructed between the late 1940s and the 1970s, typical of the postwar Florida development boom. The city developed rapidly after World War II and its layout reflects that era - wide commercial strips along US-19 and Park Boulevard, with residential grids running behind them.
About 57% of Pinellas Park homes are owner-occupied, which means most residents have a direct stake in keeping their properties in good shape. The city is surrounded by Clearwater to the north and St. Petersburg to the south, with the Gulf beaches just a short drive to the west. Helen Howarth Park is a well-known local gathering spot, and the Performing Arts Center on Park Boulevard serves as the city's main venue for community events. Most homeowners here are looking for contractors who already know the area rather than someone who needs directions to find the property.
Enjoy your sunroom year-round with full climate control and insulation.
Learn MoreAffordable screened enclosures designed for spring, summer, and fall use.
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Learn MoreCall us today or submit the contact form - we respond within one business day and serve all of Pinellas Park with no travel fees.