
PrimeLiving Largo Sunrooms works with Seminole homeowners on enclosed patio rooms, sunroom additions, and screen room installation - all permitted through Pinellas County and built to handle the salt air and storm season that comes with living a few miles from the Gulf. We respond within one business day.

Seminole ranch homes from the 1960s and 1970s often have screened lanais that have outlasted their original frames and are long overdue for a real upgrade. Converting that deteriorating screen frame into a proper enclosed patio room with windows, weatherstripping, and a sealed roof connection turns an unusable space into one that works in Seminole's heat and humidity.
Seminole is a mostly built-out suburb where moving to get more space often means leaving a neighborhood you have lived in for years. Adding a sunroom to the back of a ranch home on a flat Pinellas County lot creates new living space without uprooting, and it adds real resale value to a market where home values are above the Florida average.
Gulf breezes make Seminole evenings genuinely pleasant from fall through spring, but mosquitoes and no-see-ums make outdoor time frustrating without a screen. A properly installed screen room lets Seminole homeowners use the outdoor air they live here for, without the pest pressure that otherwise drives everyone inside.
Seminole's proximity to Lake Seminole and several local canals means some properties deal with extra moisture and humidity that accelerates wear on open patios and old screen frames. A properly built patio enclosure with sealed connections and corrosion-resistant hardware holds up significantly better than open or lightly screened structures near the water.
Seminole summers run into the low 90s with near-daily afternoon thunderstorms from June through September - conditions that make an uninsulated room genuinely unusable. A four season sunroom with full insulation, climate-controlled glazing, and a connection to the home's HVAC keeps the space comfortable even during the hottest stretch of the year.
The salt air that reaches Seminole from the Gulf a few miles away causes aluminum frames to oxidize and metal hardware to corrode faster than most homeowners expect. Vinyl frames do not rust, do not require painting, and resist the UV degradation and salt exposure that shortens the lifespan of other materials in this specific coastal environment.
Seminole sits just a few miles from the Gulf of Mexico, and that proximity creates conditions that differ from more inland parts of Pinellas County. Salt air accelerates oxidation on aluminum frames, window hardware, and metal fasteners in ways that homeowners often do not notice until something fails. The solution is not more frequent maintenance - it is choosing the right materials at the start. Marine-grade hardware and powder-coated aluminum or vinyl framing are standard on our Seminole projects because they hold up where cheaper materials do not.
The housing stock in Seminole also shapes what we typically encounter on a job. Most homes here are one-story concrete block structures built between the 1950s and the 1980s - CBS construction that holds up well in hurricanes but requires specific anchoring methods when adding a new roof structure. Many of these homes also have existing screened lanais or Florida rooms from decades past, and a significant portion of our work here involves upgrading or replacing those aging additions rather than starting entirely from scratch. Seminole's high rate of owner-occupied homes - around 70% - means most of the people we work with take a long-term view of their property, and they want the work done right rather than just done fast.
Our crew works throughout Seminole regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Seminole is a small, compact city - most of the land is already developed - and the work we do here almost always involves existing homes, existing slabs, and established neighborhoods where the homeowners have lived for years and know what they want.
Seminole is bordered by the Gulf beaches to the west and St. Petersburg to the south. The Pinellas Trail runs through the city, and Seminole City Center - built on the site of the old Seminole Mall - is the main commercial area most locals navigate around. The ranch homes near Lake Seminole Park and the canal-front properties in the western neighborhoods are the kinds of homes we work on most frequently here.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Pinellas Park to the north. If your property sits near the Seminole-Pinellas Park line, we handle both sides without any difference in process or cost.
Call or use the contact form. We follow up within one business day to ask a few questions and schedule a time to visit. You do not need drawings, plans, or measurements at this stage.
We visit your Seminole property, check the existing structure, evaluate salt-air and drainage factors, and take measurements. We leave you a written estimate with a clear scope and firm price - no obligations, no surprise line items later.
We submit the Pinellas County permit application and schedule your build for after county review - typically two to four weeks. You do not need to follow up with the building department; we manage that process through final inspection.
After the county signs off on the final inspection, we do a walkthrough of the finished room with you. You receive the permit documentation and inspection records - useful for insurance coverage and future resale.
We serve all of Seminole, use salt-air-resistant materials, and provide free written estimates with no pressure and no surprise fees.
(727) 766-0157Seminole is a small, stable city in Pinellas County with a population of about 18,000. It sits between St. Petersburg and the Gulf beaches - Madeira Beach and Redington Beach are just a few miles to the west - and nearly all of its land is already developed. The housing stock is dominated by single-story concrete block ranch homes built during the postwar Florida boom, most of them constructed between 1950 and 1985. Median home values in Seminole run around $290,000, higher than the Florida statewide average, and the owner-occupancy rate is roughly 70% - both signs of a community where homeowners invest in their properties for the long term. Many residents have lived in the same house for decades, which means a lot of the work we do here involves updating and upgrading existing structures rather than starting from nothing.
The city is perhaps best known locally for Lake Seminole Park, a popular Pinellas County park on the lake's shore that draws residents for fishing, kayaking, and picnicking. The Pinellas Trail passes through the city, and Seminole City Center serves as the main commercial hub. Parts of the city border Lake Seminole and several smaller canals, creating waterfront neighborhoods where homes face extra moisture exposure. We also serve homeowners in neighboring Pinellas Park and throughout St. Petersburg, and our crew moves between all three cities regularly.
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 or send a message - we reply within one business day and cover all of Seminole with salt-air-rated materials and full Pinellas County permit handling.