
WaveVista Weston Sunrooms & Patios serves Cooper City homeowners with patio-to-sunroom conversions, screen room installations, and full sunroom additions. We handle Broward County permits and local HOA submissions, so you get a properly built room without the paperwork headaches.

Cooper City homes were built mostly between the 1970s and 1990s, and most sit on modest lots with existing patios or screen enclosures that were built under older wind codes. Every service below addresses conditions specific to this housing stock.
A large share of Cooper City homes have covered concrete patios with existing slabs and roof overhangs - the groundwork for an enclosure is already there. A patio-to-sunroom conversion builds on that existing structure, adding walls, screens or glass, and proper permits, turning a space you already own into a room you can actually use.
Cooper City backyards are surrounded by mature trees and landscaping that attract mosquitoes and no-see-ums from May through October. A properly installed aluminum-frame screen room keeps the bugs out while preserving the outdoor feel that makes living in South Florida worthwhile in the first place.
Cooper City gets around 60 inches of rain per year, most of it in sudden heavy afternoon downpours. An enclosed patio with a solid roof keeps that rain out of the space, extends furniture life, and gives you somewhere to sit during the daily storms that define a South Florida summer.
Cooper City is an owner-occupied community where most residents plan to stay for years, which makes a sunroom addition a practical long-term investment. Adding a fully permitted room to a concrete block home here holds its value in a market where outdoor living space is one of the features buyers consistently look for.
Cooper City heat and humidity make any uninsulated outdoor room nearly unusable by mid-morning from June through September. A four season sunroom connects to your home cooling system and uses insulated glass to stay genuinely comfortable on even the hottest South Florida days.
Many Cooper City homes built in the 1980s have original sunroom structures that predate current Broward County wind codes. Remodeling those rooms with updated framing, hurricane-rated glazing, and proper roof connections brings them into compliance and removes a liability before the next storm season.
Most Cooper City homes were built between the 1970s and the 1990s as Broward County expanded westward. That housing stock is now 30 to 50 years old, and the screen enclosures and patio covers that were installed at the time were built under wind standards that are significantly weaker than what current Broward County building codes require. An older screen room that was adequate in 1985 may no longer meet the load requirements that apply today - and when a storm event exposes that gap, the consequences fall on the homeowner. Replacing aging structures with properly permitted, hurricane-rated rooms is one of the most practical investments an owner-occupant in Cooper City can make.
Cooper City also sits in a flat, low-lying section of Broward County where drainage is slow and standing water after heavy rain is common. That moisture environment accelerates corrosion on aluminum screen frames, breaks down caulk and sealant around glass panels, and creates conditions where a poorly waterproofed roof connection lets water track into the main house. Contractors who understand these local conditions build with drainage details and corrosion-resistant materials that hold up in Cooper City rather than requiring repairs a few years after installation. The combination of aging housing stock and a demanding climate makes local knowledge - not just general construction ability - the thing that separates a sunroom that lasts from one that becomes a maintenance problem.
Our crew works throughout Cooper City regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Cooper City is a small, self-contained city with its own municipality separate from Davie and Pembroke Pines on its borders, but permitting goes through Broward County Building Division rather than a city building department, and we know exactly what documentation their reviewers require for sunroom projects on the concrete block homes that make up most of the city.
Cooper City is probably best known regionally for Brian Piccolo Park, a large Broward County park with sports fields and green space that sits right along the Davie border. Most of the city is organized around quiet residential neighborhoods - Embassy Lakes and Rock Creek are two of the most recognized, and both have active HOAs with architectural review committees. We have worked in these communities and know what their review processes look for, including the material specifications and setback requirements that can hold up a project if the initial submission is incomplete.
If you are also looking at work in nearby areas, we serve homeowners in Pembroke Pines directly to the south, as well as in Davie to the north.
Call or submit a contact form and we will follow up within one business day to schedule an on-site visit at a time that works for you. You do not need to be home during the visit, but it helps if you can be there to walk us through the space.
We walk the site, assess your existing slab, roof condition, and drainage, and put together a written estimate that separates labor, materials, and permit fees. There is no pressure to decide on the spot - take the time you need to compare options.
We handle the Broward County permit application and, if needed, the HOA submission on your behalf. Construction begins once approvals are in hand - most Cooper City projects are built out in three to five weeks once permits are issued.
Broward County inspects the finished structure, and we walk you through the completed room before we leave the site. You receive the certificate of completion - a document worth keeping because it protects you when you sell your home or file a storm insurance claim.
We serve Cooper City homeowners with fully permitted sunroom additions, patio enclosures, and screen rooms. No pressure - just a straightforward conversation about what you need.
(786) 957-5827Cooper City is a small city of roughly 35,000 people in Broward County, incorporated in 1959 and developed primarily through the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s as the western suburbs of Fort Lauderdale expanded toward the Everglades. It sits between Davie to the north and east and Pembroke Pines to the south - bordered by larger cities but firmly its own place, with its own city government, parks system, and community identity. Residents consistently describe it as one of the few communities in Broward County that still feels like a neighborhood rather than a sprawling suburb. According to the Cooper City city profile, the vast majority of homes are owner-occupied, with residents who tend to stay put and invest in their properties over the long term.
The housing stock is almost entirely single-family homes built with concrete block and stucco exteriors - the standard construction method throughout South Florida. Most properties have covered patios or screen enclosures, and many have pools. Embassy Lakes and Rock Creek are the city's two most recognized planned communities, each with active HOAs and tree-lined streets that reflect the investment residents make in keeping the area looking cared-for. Neighboring communities include Weston to the west and Davie to the north - both communities we also serve.
Enjoy your sunroom year-round with full insulation and climate control.
Learn MoreA comfortable, screened space usable through spring, summer, and fall.
Learn MoreDurable patio covers that provide shade and extend outdoor living.
Learn MoreProjects book up quickly before and after storm season - reach out now and we will get your estimate scheduled within one business day.