
Apex Point St Cloud Sunrooms is a sunroom contractor serving Deltona, FL, building vinyl sunrooms, patio enclosures, and screen rooms for the predominantly 1970s-to-1990s concrete block homes throughout Volusia County - fully permitted through the City of Deltona and experienced working with the aging housing stock and sandy soil conditions that define what contractors encounter in this city.

Deltona's high humidity, heavy summer rain, and the age of most of its homes make vinyl the most practical framing choice for a new sunroom in this city. Unlike the aluminum frames used in screen enclosures from the 1980s and 1990s - which corrode at the fasteners and develop gaps after decades of Florida humidity - vinyl does not rust, does not need repainting, and does not deteriorate at the connections over time. A vinyl sunroom with heat-blocking low-e glass replaces an aging enclosure or adds a new room to your home with the lowest long-term maintenance commitment of any framing option available for Deltona conditions.
The majority of Deltona's single-family homes were built with a concrete slab lanai in the backyard, and many of those slabs are still structurally sound even when the screen enclosure above them is not. Converting a usable slab into a properly enclosed patio room - with current-code framing, wind-rated panels, and a watertight roofline - adds a genuine room to your home without touching the interior. For Deltona homeowners whose original enclosure is failing but whose slab is in good shape, this is the most direct path to an enclosed space at the lowest total cost.
Deltona's afternoon thunderstorms and mosquito pressure are a near-constant reality for backyard use from spring through fall, and a properly framed screen room over an existing slab is the most cost-effective way to reclaim that space. Screen rooms do not condition the air, but they eliminate insect exposure and give the space basic weather protection that makes evening use possible when the bugs are at their worst. For Deltona homeowners replacing torn or corroded screens on an older enclosure, a full re-screen with new framing is typically a better value than patching individual sections year after year.
Deltona gets hot and humid from May through September - the kind of weather that makes any room without insulation and air conditioning feel like a greenhouse well before noon. An all season room with low-e glass panels and a direct connection to your home's HVAC system stays at a comfortable temperature year-round, turning a back-of-house slab into a genuine extra room the family actually uses. For homeowners in Deltona's original Deltona Lakes neighborhoods who want to add a home office, a sitting room, or a space for the kids without moving or doing a full interior addition, this is the right build.
Deltona is overwhelmingly a single-family home city, and most lots in the original Deltona Lakes neighborhoods have enough backyard space to accommodate an addition without hitting setback limits. For families who need a home office, a playroom, or a comfortable sitting room - but want to avoid the cost and disruption of buying a larger home in a market where prices have risen significantly - a sunroom addition adds permitted square footage using the existing backyard footprint. Deltona's high homeownership rate means most people asking about this are thinking about long-term value, not just a short-term fix.
Many of Deltona's older homes have an enclosed porch or Florida room that was built 30 to 40 years ago and has not been updated since. Original materials from that era - single-pane glass, painted aluminum frames, minimal insulation - were never built for year-round use in Florida's climate, and the result is a room that is too hot in summer and too drafty in winter. A targeted remodel that replaces the glass, improves the insulation, and adds or upgrades a cooling connection turns that underused space into a room with real daily value, without the full cost and timeline of starting from scratch.
Deltona is unusual among Central Florida cities in that almost its entire housing stock was built within a single 30-year window - from the 1970s through the late 1990s - as part of General Development Corporation's planned community build-out. That history means the vast majority of homes in the city are now 30 to 50 years old, and the original roofing, insulation, and enclosure structures on those homes are reaching or past the end of their useful life at roughly the same time. Original screen enclosures from this era used aluminum frames that corrode in Florida's humidity, and the screen mesh degrades from UV exposure over years of direct sun. A contractor working in Deltona sees this pattern constantly: a homeowner whose enclosure has been patched several times and is now past the point where patching makes sense. The right response is a full replacement built to current wind-load standards - not another patch on an aging frame.
Deltona's soil conditions add a layer of complexity that matters specifically for foundation and slab work. The city sits on sandy soil that drains quickly in some spots but can pool and saturate in low-lying areas after heavy rain - and some of Deltona's original neighborhoods were built on land that was previously wetland or near lakes. Sandy soil shifts and settles over time, which is the most common reason concrete driveways crack and patio slabs go uneven after a decade or two. Before any new framing is anchored, a contractor should assess the existing slab for settling, cracking, or drainage concerns that would put stress on a new structure. Volusia County also falls under Florida's statewide hurricane wind-load requirements, which means the framing and glazing on any permitted sunroom must be engineered to resist storm forces - not optional, not negotiable, and not something a properly licensed contractor will skip.
Our crew works throughout Deltona regularly, and we pull all permits for this area through the City of Deltona Building Division. Deltona is an incorporated city in Volusia County with its own permit office, and we are familiar with their plan review process and what their inspectors look for on sunroom and enclosure submissions in this jurisdiction.
Deltona sits along Interstate 4 between Orlando and Daytona Beach, and most of its neighborhoods are laid out off Howland Boulevard, Doyle Road, and Saxon Boulevard - the main east-west corridors through the city. The original Deltona Lakes neighborhoods are concentrated in the central and northern parts of the city, and newer subdivisions have been added on the outer edges along Saxon Boulevard and near the Volusia/Seminole County line. We serve homeowners throughout all of these areas, from homes near Lyonia Preserve to neighborhoods closer to Lake Monroe on the city's southern edge.
We also serve homeowners in St. Cloud to the southwest and Sanford to the northwest, and our crews move between these service areas throughout the week. Homeowners in any part of Deltona are welcome to call directly - we know this city's neighborhoods and we are ready to come take a look.
Call us or submit a contact form. We follow up within one business day with a few quick questions about your space - the approximate size, whether there is an existing slab, and whether your neighborhood has an HOA. This is a short call, not a sales pitch.
We visit your home, measure the space, and assess the existing slab and structure. For Deltona's older homes, this step includes checking slab condition and drainage - factors that affect the foundation approach and final cost. You receive a written estimate that breaks down what is included, with no phone quotes on jobs we have not seen in person.
After you sign a contract, we submit the permit application to the City of Deltona Building Division. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we start their review at the same time. Permit review typically takes three to six weeks. We handle all the paperwork and keep you informed about timing - you do not need to contact the city yourself.
Construction on most Deltona projects takes one to three weeks once materials arrive. Volusia County requires inspections at framing and final stages - we coordinate these and are present for them. Before we close out the job, we walk through the finished room with you and address any punch-list items before collecting final payment.
We serve Deltona and all of Volusia County. Call us or submit a form and we will follow up within one business day with next steps.
(689) 214-9067Deltona is one of the largest cities in Florida by population, with roughly 100,000 residents spread across a network of suburban neighborhoods in Volusia County. The city was originally developed as a planned community by General Development Corporation starting in the 1960s, and the original Deltona Lakes neighborhoods that make up much of the city's core were built out through the 1970s and 1980s. That history gives Deltona a distinctive character - a large, established city built almost entirely in a single era, where long-time residents often own homes that are the same age as their neighbors' and are dealing with the same maintenance decisions at roughly the same time. The housing stock is overwhelmingly single-family concrete block and stucco construction on modest lots, the standard Florida build for that period, with attached or detached garages and backyard patio slabs that are now 30 to 50 years old.
Newer subdivisions have been added on Deltona's outer edges in the 2000s and 2010s, particularly near Saxon Boulevard and along the city's eastern reaches toward Volusia County's interior. The city sits on Interstate 4 halfway between Orlando and Daytona Beach, and most residents commute to jobs in one of those two metro areas. Deltona shares its southern border with Seminole County and sits near Sanford, which borders Lake Monroe to the northwest. The southern edge of Deltona approaches the same lake corridor, and homes in the lower-lying neighborhoods near the water share the drainage and soil considerations that come with lakefront-adjacent property. Homeowners throughout Deltona - from the original Deltona Lakes streets to the newer growth areas near Saxon Boulevard - can call us directly for an on-site estimate.
Keep bugs out and breezes in with a professionally installed screen room.
Learn MoreConvert your existing patio into a year-round enclosed sunroom.
Learn MoreEnclosed patio rooms that add living space without major construction.
Learn MoreWe serve homeowners throughout Deltona and Volusia County. Call us or submit a contact form and we will follow up within one business day.