FramePro Clearwater Sunrooms builds all season rooms, sunroom additions, and screen enclosures for Pinellas Park homeowners - with concrete block anchoring, Pinellas County permits handled, and a reply within one business day.

Pinellas Park summers run hot and humid from May through October, and an insulated all season room with Low-E glazing and a dedicated mini-split gives homeowners here a comfortable space that functions through every month of the year - not just the mild winters.
Most Pinellas Park homes are fully built out on their lots with little room to expand, making a sunroom addition one of the most efficient ways to gain living space. We attach additions directly to existing concrete block walls using masonry anchors - the correct method for CBS construction that is standard throughout Pinellas Park.
Pinellas Park gets heavy afternoon thunderstorms nearly every summer day, and a screen enclosure protects outdoor living areas from rain, wind-blown debris, and the mosquito pressure that spikes after rain. Powder-coated aluminum frames hold up to UV exposure and the salt air that drifts in from the Gulf and Tampa Bay.
Many postwar Pinellas Park ranch homes have a covered concrete lanai slab from original construction - often still solid after 50 years. Converting that slab into an enclosed sunroom is usually more cost-effective than building on new footings because the foundation work is already done.
Pinellas Park's flat lots mean standing water after summer storms is a regular issue for homeowners, and a properly designed patio enclosure keeps rain from pooling on the slab and seeping under door thresholds. We design enclosures with positive drainage details suited to the flat terrain common throughout the city.
Pinellas Park has a large stock of older Florida rooms and jalousie-window enclosures added to homes in the 1960s and 1970s that are well past their useful life. Replacing those aging additions with modern framing, Low-E glass, and proper insulation dramatically improves comfort and energy efficiency in a home that already has the footprint.
Pinellas Park is a dense, fully built-out city where most construction work happens on existing homes rather than new lots. The city covers roughly 15 square miles with a population of around 55,000, and virtually every residential lot is already occupied. That means most sunroom and enclosure projects here involve working around existing concrete block walls, established setbacks, and lots with little extra clearance. The concrete block stucco (CBS) construction common throughout the city requires different anchoring, flashing, and sealing techniques than wood-frame homes, and contractors unfamiliar with CBS work can create moisture intrusion points that cause expensive damage over time.
Climate is the other factor that shapes every project in Pinellas Park. The city gets roughly 50 inches of rain per year, most of it from intense afternoon thunderstorms between June and September. Flat lots with limited natural drainage mean water accumulates around foundations, slabs, and under screen enclosures after heavy rain. Beyond rain, more than 240 sunny days per year breaks down exterior materials faster than homeowners expect - screen mesh, caulk, painted aluminum, and weatherstripping all degrade more quickly in sustained Florida UV exposure than product ratings from cooler climates suggest. Building to the Florida Building Code's Pinellas County wind-load standards is also required for all permitted enclosure work.
Our crew works throughout Pinellas Park regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect sunroom contractor work here. Permitted projects in Pinellas Park go through the City of Pinellas Park Development Services Department, and we are familiar with the plan review process for sunroom additions and enclosures in this municipality. Most Pinellas Park projects require engineered drawings that meet Pinellas County Florida Building Code wind-load requirements, and we have those prepared before submitting.
Pinellas Park sits near the center of the Pinellas Peninsula, with US-19 and Park Boulevard running through the city as the main commercial corridors. The residential neighborhoods off those roads - the grid streets built out in the 1950s through 1970s - are where most of our work happens. These homes have flat lots, concrete block exteriors, attached carports or garages, and small to mid-sized backyards that we build enclosures and additions around every week.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring Seminole to the west toward the Gulf beaches, and regularly work in Largo just to the north.
Contact us by phone or through the form and we respond within one business day to schedule your free on-site estimate. No charge, no commitment required at that stage.
We visit your Pinellas Park property, measure the space, assess the existing slab and CBS walls, and review your options. You receive a written quote before we move forward - pricing is fixed, not an estimate that changes later.
We prepare and submit permit documents to the City of Pinellas Park Development Services on your behalf, including engineered drawings where required. Once the permit is approved, we schedule your build start.
Most Pinellas Park projects take one to six weeks of construction depending on scope. We coordinate city inspections and walk through the finished project with you before calling the job complete.
We serve homeowners throughout Pinellas Park and surrounding Pinellas County. Call us or fill out the form and we will respond within one business day with a free estimate for your Pinellas Park property.
(727) 296-0359Pinellas Park is a city of roughly 55,000 residents near the center of the Pinellas Peninsula, bordered by St. Petersburg to the south, Clearwater to the north, and the Gulf beaches to the west. The city developed rapidly after World War II, and its layout reflects that era - wide commercial strips along US-19, residential blocks laid out in grids, and properties designed around car ownership with attached carports and garages. Most of the land is fully developed, with very little new construction happening. Homeowners here are overwhelmingly working on existing properties, not building from scratch.
The housing stock is predominantly postwar single-family ranch homes built between the late 1940s and the 1970s using concrete block construction - the same CBS method standard throughout Pinellas County during that period. About 57 percent of housing units in Pinellas Park are owner-occupied according to U.S. Census data, and many of those homeowners have lived in the same house for decades. The city's history as a post-WWII auto-era suburb means lots tend to be flat, small to moderate in size, and fully occupied by existing structures. Neighboring St. Petersburg is directly to the south, and Clearwater is a short drive north, with both cities sharing the same flat, CBS-dominated residential character.
Estimates are free and there is no obligation. Call now or send a message and we will schedule a visit to your Pinellas Park home within the week.