A Year-Round Room at a Sunroom Price
Per the Renaissance manufacturer FAQ, a sunroom runs 20–50% less than a traditional room addition and builds in about 90 days. You get the year-round room without the addition price tag or the 6–12 month timeline.
- Renaissance Polycarbonate Sunrooms – Hurricane-rated to 175 mph
- Four-Season Climate-Controlled – Insulated glass + HVAC tie-in
- Three-Season Screen Rooms – Open air with no bugs
- Lifetime Product Warranty – Renaissance backs the structure for life
- ~3 Weeks On-Site Work – Most fabrication happens off-site
Renaissance Polycarbonate Sunrooms
Renaissance polycarbonate sunrooms are the budget-friendly path to a real enclosed room — fully covered, fully enclosed, hurricane-rated. The polycarbonate panels block UV while letting natural light through, and the aluminum frame carries a lifetime warranty.
$28K–$55K
Final number depends on your specific scope, finishes, and site conditions. I'll quote the exact figure after a walk-through.
Why
Polycarbonate is the way to get a sunroom price below glass. UV-blocked, impact-rated, and lighter on the structure — and visually it reads as a finished room from the inside.
What
Renaissance polycarbonate sunroom with 100% extruded aluminum frame, hurricane-rated to 175 mph, lifetime product warranty. Optional ceiling fan, lighting, ductless mini-split for climate control.
How
About 90 days total project; ~3 weeks of actual on-site work. Most fabrication happens off-site at the Renaissance factory. Foundation week 1; structure raised week 2–3.
Renaissance is the only sunroom system I install. The hurricane spec is real — it's tested at 175 mph — and the lifetime warranty isn't an asterisk.


Four-Season Climate-Controlled Rooms
A true year-round room with insulated glass walls, HVAC tie-in (or dedicated ductless mini-split), and the structure to be conditioned 12 months a year. Use it as a breakfast room, an office, a sitting room, or a library — same as any other interior space.
$45K–$90K
Final number depends on your specific scope, finishes, and site conditions. I'll quote the exact figure after a walk-through.
Why
Four-season is what turns a sunroom from 'nice in March' into 'used every day.' The insulated glass and HVAC tie-in mean you're not sweating in July or shivering in January.
What
Insulated glass walls, hurricane-rated aluminum frame to 175 mph, HVAC tie-in to existing system or dedicated ductless mini-split, finish flooring matching the interior, code-compliant electrical.
How
~90 day project; on-site work concentrated in 3–4 weeks. HVAC tie-in adds a few days at the end. Foundation, structure, glass, and finish — the whole sequence.
If you tie a sunroom into the existing HVAC, the duct sizing has to be checked first. I'll have your HVAC contractor run the load calc — adding 200 sq ft to a system that's already maxed is how a $90K sunroom turns into a hot box.
Three-Season Screen Rooms
An open-air screened room — full Renaissance Dolce screen walls, hurricane-rated frame, no bugs and no glass. Three seasons of comfortable use in NE FL (most of October through May) with the breeze still moving through the space.
$22K–$45K
Final number depends on your specific scope, finishes, and site conditions. I'll quote the exact figure after a walk-through.
Why
If you don't need glass — if you want the breeze and just want the bugs out — a screen room is half the price of a glass sunroom and 80% of the experience.
What
Renaissance Dolce screen wall system with 20×20 mesh (impenetrable to no-see-ums), concealed fasteners (no visible screws), ZEUS heavy-gauge welded screen door, hurricane-rated aluminum frame to 175 mph.
How
Single permit, single crew. Foundation and frame in 1–2 weeks; screen wall and door in 3–5 days. Total project usually 3–4 weeks on site.
Standard screens use coarser mesh that no-see-ums walk right through. The 20×20 Dolce mesh is the spec I trust — and it's what makes evening use of the room actually enjoyable.
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What people ask me to build for their sunroom.
See yours in the list? Tap it to jump to the form — you'll have a real budget range in 90 seconds. Don't see it? Tell me about it in step 6 — I read every one personally.
- Renaissance polycarbonate sunroom
- Four-season climate-controlled room
- Three-season screen room
- Glass-walled breakfast room
- Sunroom as home office
- Sunroom as reading nook
- Sunroom over the existing patio
- Tie sunroom into existing HVAC
- Dedicated mini-split for sunroom
- Hurricane-rated to 175 mph
- Lifetime aluminum frame warranty
- Insulated glass for year-round use
- Polycarbonate panels (UV-blocked)
- Convert covered patio to sunroom
- Replace screened porch with glass
- Match finish floor to interior
- Ceiling fan + lighting in sunroom
- Match roofline to main house
- 20×20 no-see-um mesh
- ZEUS welded screen door
- Sunroom in 90 days
- ~3 weeks on-site disruption only
Don't see yours? Describe it in step 6 — I read every one personally.
Frequently Asked Questions About Sunrooms & Florida Rooms
Sunrooms & Florida Rooms Service Areas
We proudly serve Jacksonville and the surrounding Northeast Florida communities. Our team of experienced professionals is ready to bring your vision to life, no matter where you're located in our service area.
Don't see your area?
Contact me to check availabilityRead the Clay County cost & permit guide.
A sunroom in Clay County, FL runs $8,000–$22,000 for a basic screened lanai cover, $20,000–$50,000 for a polycarbonate or solid-roof sunroom (un-conditioned), and $40,000–$95,000 for a four-season conditioned sunroom that becomes part of the heated and cooled house. Full breakdown — every tier, every permit step, every fee — in the guide.
Read the Sunroom & Patio Cover guideOne contract. One number to call. One Mark.
Tell me about your sunrooms & florida rooms above — you'll see your real budget range mid-flow, and I'll call within 24 hours with a specific quote. No project managers between us.
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