Motorized screens that protect your outdoor space from hurricanes, bugs, blazing sun,
and prying eyes—so you can enjoy Florida living 365 days a year.

BBB Accredited

26 Years Experience

Veteran Own

Cate-5 Hurricane Rated
You invested in the patio. The lanai. The view.
But somehow, you're not the one enjoying it.
The sun is relentless. The mosquitoes own the evenings. Every hurricane season brings the same scramble—plywood, panic, and prayers. And that outdoor furniture you splurged on? It's already fading.
Mother Nature has taken over your outdoor space. And every month you don't act, you're paying for square footage you can't use.
It doesn't have to be this way. One button changes everything.
You invested in the patio. The lanai. The view.
But somehow, you're not the one enjoying it.
The sun is relentless. The mosquitoes own the evenings. Every hurricane season brings the same scramble—plywood, panic, and prayers. And that outdoor furniture you splurged on? It's already fading.
Mother Nature has taken over your outdoor space. And every month you don't act, you're paying for square footage you can't use.
It doesn't have to be this way. One button changes everything.
A Partner
A Partner
Protecting Your Winter Springs is a simple as a push of a button. Premium motorized screens for every Florida challenge

Our MagnaTrack Defender Hurricane Screens are rated for a Cat-5, offering impact absorption. Storm prep for Patios & Lanais made simple.

Do pesky insects evict you from your patio 30 minutes before dusk? Avoid the itch; click a button and watch Fenetex Motorized Screens deploy

Beat the Heat. Getting Chased off your patio or lanai. Our MagnaTrack Solar shades for patio's and lanais blocks up to 80% -97% of harmful UV rays

Do your neighbor's see more of your patio than you do? Click a botton & watch the MagnaTrack Privacy Screens deploy. You can see out, but they cant see in.
Block the sun. Light up the nights. The perfect backdrop

Enjoy on-demand sun protection with retractable awnings, offering shade when you need it and open skies when you don't.
Motorized Awnings: Upgrade your outdoor space with motorized awnings, providing effortless sun protection at the touch of a button.

LIght up your homes night with beautiful customized outdoor lighting solutions with Garden LED lighting.
It does not matter, if you're looking to increase your home's security, boost curb appeal, our team is here to bring your vision to life.

Need privacy in your backyard that combines aesthetics with durability and requires very little maintenance?
Welcome to Greenwood Fence. High-quality modern European-style fencing for the residential, commercial
Block the sun. Light up the nights. The perfect backdrop

Enjoy on-demand sun protection with retractable awnings, offering shade when you need it and open skies when you don't.
Motorized Awnings: Upgrade your outdoor space with motorized awnings, providing effortless sun protection at the touch of a button.

LIght up your homes night with beautiful customized outdoor lighting solutions with Garden LED lighting.
It does not matter, if you're looking to increase your home's security, boost curb appeal, our team is here to bring your vision to life.

Need privacy in your backyard that combines aesthetics with durability and requires very little maintenance?
Welcome to Greenwood Fence. High-quality modern European-style fencing for the residential, commercial
At Florida Living Outdoor, we specialize in enhancing, expanding, and protecting your outdoor living spaces, making them more functional and enjoyable. It does not matter if it is an open space, patio, or lanai. We offer top-of-the-line solutions, including motorized retractable screens, sun awnings, and aluminum pergolas.
At Florida Living Outdoor, we understand the weather. When you're enhancing your Palm Beach Gardens' outdoor living spaces or making them more functional, you're not just looking for a product. You are looking for a partner to help complete your vision.
The bottom line is that nobody knows Sun Pro Awings, MagnaTrack Motorized Screens, and Fenetex Motorized Screens better than Florida Living Outdoor. We are Florida's number one Trusted resource for Motorized Screens and Awnings.

At Florida Living Outdoor, we specialize in enhancing, expanding, and protecting your outdoor living spaces, making them more functional and enjoyable. It does not matter if it is an open space, patio, or lanai. We offer top-of-the-line solutions, including motorized retractable screens, sun awnings, and aluminum pergolas.
At Florida Living Outdoor, we understand. When it comes to enhancing your outdoor living spaces or making them more functional, your not just looking for a product. You are looking for a partner to help complete your vision.
The bottom line is that nobody knows Sun Pro Awings, MagnaTrack Motorized Screens, and Fenetex Motorized Screens better than Florida Living Outdoor. We are Florida's number one Trusted resource for Motorized Screens and Awnings.
Your Florida home should be a sanctuary to relax, spend time with family, and maybe even entertain. Adding Motorized Screens to patios empowers you to curate any outdoor space so it complements your aesthetics and meets your needs.
Screens are the solution for both residential and commercial outdoor spaces. Having been in business since 2007, we continually innovate to improve our products and stay ahead of the industry.
Whether you're investing in your restaurant's patio seating or weather-proofing your outdoor event space, making sure those areas remain usable and enjoyable for guests is critical to the bottom line and your business' ultimate success.
Does your restaurant’s patio contend with glaring sun? Or maybe the luxury outdoor kitchen at your home is being invaded by bugs? Maybe the upcoming hurricane season has you concerned. Whatever the challenge, Fenetex Motorized

Home should be a sanctuary to relax, spend time with family, and maybe even entertain. Adding Fenetex screens to patios empowers you to curate any outdoor space so it complements your aesthetics and meets your needs.
Screens are the solution for both residential and commercial outdoor spaces. Having been in business since 2007, we continually innovate to improve our products and stay ahead of the industry.

Whether you're investing in your restaurant's patio seating or weather-proofing your outdoor event space, making sure those areas remain usable and enjoyable for guests is critical to the bottom line and your business' ultimate success.
Does your restaurant’s patio contend with glaring sun? Or maybe the luxury outdoor kitchen at your home is being invaded by bugs? Maybe the upcoming hurricane season has you concerned. Whatever the challenge, Fenetex Motorized
Looking to upgrade your outdoor space in Winter Springs? Florida Living Outdoor specializes in transforming patios and lanais into the ultimate man cave or stylish retreat with high-quality patio curtains. Our custom solutions offer privacy, shade, and a touch of elegance, perfect for those seeking innovative man cave ideas. Whether you want to create a cozy entertainment space or a serene outdoor living area, our expert team is here to bring your vision to life. Explore how we can elevate your outdoor experience with our top-tier products and exceptional service.
Looking to upgrade your outdoor space in Winter Springs? Florida Living Outdoor specializes in transforming patios and lanais into the ultimate man cave or stylish retreat with high-quality patio curtains. Our custom solutions offer privacy, shade, and a touch of elegance, perfect for those seeking innovative man cave ideas. Whether you want to create a cozy entertainment space or a serene outdoor living area, our expert team is here to bring your vision to life. Explore how we can elevate your outdoor experience with our top-tier products and exceptional service.
A Partner
A Partner
Other than build great outdoor project here is what we love most about Winter Springs. Here are five fun facts about Winter Springs:
1. Explore the Cross Seminole Trail: The Cross Seminole Trail is one of Winter Springs' premier outdoor attractions, offering nearly 30 miles of smooth, paved pathway perfect for walking, jogging, or cycling. A lush tree canopy provides welcome shade as the trail winds through diverse landscapes, delivering fresh scenery and peaceful wildlife encounters around every turn. The route connects to several major trails—including the Seminole Wekiva Trail, Spring to Spring Trail, Cady Way Trail, and the Florida Coast to Coast Trail—opening the door to even bigger adventures across the region. Getting started is easy with multiple access points throughout Winter Springs, including Black Hammock Trailhead on E SR 434 and Central Winds Park on Central Winds Drive. Whether you're chasing a workout or simply craving a quiet escape into nature, this trail is one of Central Florida's finest.
2. Central Winds Park: Central Winds Park is the beating heart of Winter Springs, serving as the community's go-to destination for sports, recreation, and year-round events. The park boasts top-tier athletic facilities including baseball, softball, and soccer fields, basketball courts, and playgrounds—regularly hosting everything from Babe Ruth tournaments to national youth AAU competitions. It's also the stage for beloved community celebrations like the Annual Hometown Harvest, the Celebration of Freedom, and the Central Florida Scottish Highland Games. When you're not catching a game or joining the festivities, the park's shaded pavilions, open green spaces, and picnic areas offer the perfect setting to relax and soak in the Florida sunshine. No matter what brings you here, Central Winds Park delivers something for every member of the family..
3. Winter Springs Town Center: Winter Springs Town Center is the community's vibrant social hub, bringing together a fantastic mix of dining, shopping, and entertainment in one lively destination. From cozy cafes and diverse local eateries to unique boutiques and everyday essentials, there's always a reason to stop by and support the area's thriving small businesses. The Town Center truly shines during the holiday season with the beloved Winter Springs Winter Wonderland & Parade, featuring festive floats, a tree lighting ceremony, walkthrough light displays, live entertainment, and a visit from Santa himself. Beyond the holidays, seasonal events and community gatherings keep the energy going year-round, drawing families and neighbors together for memorable experiences. With its welcoming atmosphere and something for every age, Winter Springs Town Center is the kind of place where a quick outing easily turns into an entire afternoon.
4. Black Hammock: The Black Hammock area of Oviedo is where Old Florida charm meets modern-day agritourism, anchored by the Black Hammock Wilderness Area, a 700-acre preserve featuring a 4.5-mile loop trail through shady hardwood hammocks, elevated boardwalks, and pine flatwoods teeming with wildlife along the shores of Lake Jesup. After a day on the trails, the Black Hammock Restaurant is the perfect stop for award-winning gator bites, hand-breaded catfish, and lakeside views of one of Florida's most alligator-populated lakes. Black Hammock Bee Farms is a second-generation family operation that rescues over 500 bee colonies annually while offering honey tastings, beekeeping classes, and a shop full of pure, raw, locally harvested honey. Black Hammock Farm brings a 'Live, Fresh, Local' philosophy to the community, raising heritage Katahdin sheep and poultry while offering fresh egg pickups and eco-friendly land clearing through their innovative Rent-A-Herd program. Together, these destinations make the Black Hammock community a must-visit for anyone seeking Central Florida's agricultural roots and natural beauty beyond the theme parks.
5. Tuscawilla Country Club: Tuscawilla Country Club is far more than a golf destination—it's the social heartbeat of the Winter Springs community, blending Southern plantation-style elegance with a full slate of family-friendly amenities. The centerpiece is an 18-hole, par-72 championship course designed by renowned architect Joe Lee in 1971, stretching 6,851 yards through gently rolling terrain shaded by majestic Live Oaks draped in Spanish moss, with a slope rating of 137 that challenges golfers of every skill level. The course underwent an extensive restoration in 2004–2005 led by Florida designer Terry LaGree, expanding greens by 40 percent, adding eight new tee boxes, and introducing new putting surfaces to bring the layout closer to Lee's original vision. Beyond the fairways, the club boasts Diamond Zoysia greens, Har-Tru clay tennis courts with LED lighting, a Jr. Olympic-sized swimming pool, a fitness center, and The Oaks Restaurant—all set within a charming wrap-around veranda clubhouse. With a packed social calendar, monthly events for all ages, and versatile spaces perfect for weddings and private gatherings, Tuscawilla delivers a complete lifestyle experience year-round

The Great Florida Thaw — Blog 6 of 10
Reading time: ~10 minutes
Quick Answer: "What's the difference between a screened-in porch and motorized screens?"A screened-in porch is a permanent aluminum-framed structure with fixed mesh panels — always in place, always blocking bugs, but always partially obstructing your view and reducing the open-air feel. Motorized retractable screens deploy on demand and disappear completely when raised, giving you a fully open patio whenever conditions allow. Screen enclosures typically cost $6,000 to $15,000 for a standard patio or pool area. Motorized systems run $3,000 to $6,000 per opening, meaning a full patio with three to four openings can reach $12,000 to $24,000. The right choice depends on whether you value constant protection or on-demand flexibility — and neither option is wrong.
You already know you want protection. That part's settled. The bugs won, the sun won, the rain won — and you're done pretending the patio is fine without some kind of barrier between your family and whatever South Florida throws at you next.
The question keeping you stuck isn't whether to screen your outdoor space. It's how.
And if you've spent any time researching, you've probably landed in the same frustrating loop that catches most Florida homeowners: screen enclosures are what everybody has. Motorized retractable screens are what the internet keeps showing you. Your neighbor swears by the cage. Your contractor mentioned something retractable. We offer two different price ranges and two different experiences, and we don't provide a straight comparison with an agenda.
This is that comparison. No agenda. Just a framework.
We install motorized screens every week. We think they're extraordinary for certain situations. We also think screen enclosures are the better call in other situations—and we'll tell you exactly when because the worst outcome here isn't picking the wrong product. It's staying frozen in the research phase while another summer burns through your patio, your tolerance, and your evenings.
Screen enclosures are to Florida what basements are to the Midwest — so common they feel mandatory. Drive through any neighborhood in Broward, Palm Beach, or Hillsborough County, and you'll count more pool cages than mailboxes. The aluminum frames. The mesh panels. The screen door that never quite closes right after the third year.
There's a reason this became the default. Screen enclosures solve the two problems Florida homeowners care about most: bugs around the pool and debris in the water. They do both jobs around the clock without any input from you: no buttons, no maintenance schedule, no learning curve. The cage goes up, the bugs stay out, the leaves stay out, and you stop thinking about it.
That simplicity matters. A screen enclosure is a passive solution — it works whether you're home or on vacation, whether you remember to deploy it or forget. For pool owners, especially, this alone justifies the investment. Less skimming, fewer chemicals, cleaner water, and a barrier that satisfies Florida's pool safety requirements for child protection.
Screen enclosures in Florida typically fall between $6,000 and $15,000 for a standard patio or pool area, depending on size, roof style, and materials. Aluminum framing with fiberglass mesh is the most common configuration. The structure requires engineering, permitting, and a concrete footer — a process that takes four to twelve weeks from consultation to completion. The mesh itself lasts 5 to 15 years before needing replacement, and rescreening costs $1,000 to $5,000, depending on square footage and material choice.
Not a bad deal. Not a bad product.
But it comes with tradeoffs most homeowners don't think about until the cage is already up.

The view changes. Not dramatically — you can still see your yard through the mesh. But the aluminum framing creates visual lines that segment your sightline, and the mesh creates a faint haze that accumulates over time from dust, pollen, and hard-water stains. If you bought your home for the view, or spent real money on landscaping, that slight reduction in clarity adds up psychologically. You stop noticing it consciously. But you feel it.
The space becomes permanently enclosed. This is the tradeoff that catches people off guard. On a cool February evening — the kind South Florida gives you maybe thirty or forty times a year — you might want your patio completely open. No screen. No frame. Just air. A screen enclosure doesn't offer that option. It's enclosed in February the same way it's enclosed in August. The protection is constant, and so is the confinement.
Hurricane prep creates a separate headache. Standard screen enclosures aren't hurricane-rated. The mesh acts like a sail in high winds, putting enormous pressure on the aluminum frame. Many contractors recommend cutting the screens before a major storm to save the structure, then paying to have them replaced afterward. A typical rescreening after hurricane damage runs $2,000 to $8,000 or more, depending on severity. Insurance may cover part of it, but deductibles and claim limits often leave homeowners absorbing a significant chunk.
And the space doesn't flex. You can't open one wall for a breeze while keeping the others sealed for bugs. You can't lower the shade on the west side during the afternoon sun. The enclosure is one configuration, all the time, regardless of conditions.
Motorized retractable screens are newer to the Florida market, which is why they still sound unfamiliar to most homeowners. The concept is simple: mesh panels housed in a compact overhead cassette that deploy downward along side tracks at the press of a button and retract completely when you don't need them.
When the screens are down, you get bug protection, wind reduction, and varying degrees of solar filtering depending on the mesh type — insect mesh, solar shade, or privacy screen. When the screens are up, they disappear. No frame in your sightline. No mesh between you and the yard. The patio returns to a fully open space.
When the screens are down, you get bug protection, wind reduction, and varying degrees of sun filtering depending on the mesh type — insect mesh, solar shade, or privacy screen. When the screens are up, they disappear. No frame in your sightline. No mesh between you and the yard. The patio returns to a fully open space.
That flexibility is the fundamental difference. A screen enclosure gives you permanent protection. Motorized screens give you protection on demand.
For a standard patio opening — roughly 15 feet wide by 10 feet tall — a quality motorized screen system runs between $3,000 and $6,000 installed. Most patios have three to four openings, which puts the total investment between $12,000 and $24,000 for full perimeter coverage. That's higher than most screen enclosures, and worth being upfront about.
But the per-opening price includes the motor, the tracks, the cassette housing, smart home integration, and, in certain configurations, wind ratings that screen enclosures can't match. MagnaTrack systems by Progressive Screens, for example, carry hurricane ratings that meet Miami-Dade building code standards — protection against winds exceeding 150 miles per hour. The same screens you'd lower for a Tuesday evening cookout can deploy as storm protection when a hurricane approaches. One system. Two problems solved. (We wrote an entire piece on that dual-purpose value — it's Blog 8 in this series.) You can learn more about how the track technology works at OneTrackScreens.com.
Here's where most comparison articles lose credibility. They stack the deck in favor of whichever product the writer is selling. We're going to do something different — lay out the categories that actually matter and let you see where each option wins and where it falls short.
Neither column dominates. That's the point. If one option were strictly better, there would be no comparison article to write and no decision to agonize over.

Forget the spec sheets for a minute. Forget the cost breakdowns. The decision between a screen enclosure and motorized screens comes down to how you actually live — not which product has better numbers on paper. Answer these five questions, and your answer becomes obvious.
If you'd use the space without any screening on mild days — February through April, October through November — motorized screens give you that option. A screen enclosure doesn't. If you genuinely don't care about open air and just want year-round bug exclusion, the enclosure wins on simplicity.
Pool debris is a 24/7 problem that benefits from a 24/7 solution. Leaves fall at 3 a.m. Pollen coats the surface while you're at work. A screen enclosure handles this passively. If your frustration is centered on evenings lost to mosquitoes — the 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. window we covered in Blog 4 — motorized screens solve that specific problem without permanently enclosing the space.
This is where motorized screens carry an advantage that screen enclosures simply can't match. Hurricane-rated configurations like MagnaTrack meet Miami-Dade code and withstand winds above 150 mph. Standard screen enclosures require you to cut the mesh before a storm and pay for rescreening afterward — a cycle that costs $2,000 to $8,000 per event. If storm protection matters, motorized screens collapse two line items into one investment.
If you spent money on the backyard — landscaping, a water feature, a view corridor — and you want to see it without aluminum framing and mesh haze, motorized screens preserve that experience when retracted. If your outdoor space faces a fence or a neighbor's wall and the view isn't a factor, the enclosure's visual footprint becomes irrelevant.
Screen enclosures are dead simple. No moving parts (other than a screen door), no motors to service, no remotes to lose. Motorized screens require occasional attention — annual motor checks, track cleaning, and keeping the system connected if you're using smart home integration. If you want something you never have to think about, the enclosure is your answer. If you're comfortable with technology and want something that adapts to conditions, motorized systems reward the engagement.
Here's where most comparisons get lazy. They show the upfront number and stop. The upfront number favors screen enclosures — no argument there. But the ten-year cost picture tells a different story.
A screen enclosure installed at $10,000 will likely need one full rescreening ($2,000 to $5,000) within a decade, plus potential hurricane repair costs. Call it $12,000 to $18,000 over ten years, depending on storm luck and maintenance habits.
Motorized screens installed at $18,000 for a full patio may need minor motor service and occasional mesh adjustments. But the mesh lasts longer because it's retracted and shielded from UV when not in use. And hurricane-rated models eliminate the rescreening after every storm cycle entirely. Ten-year cost: roughly $18,000 to $20,000.
The gap narrows more than most people expect. And it narrows further when you factor in what we explored in Blog 2—the usable hours calculation. Motorized screens with solar shade mesh can extend comfortable patio hours into the afternoon heat window, adding weeks of usability that a bug-only screen enclosure doesn't address.
The homeowner who wants a screen enclosure values consistency. They want the space handled. The pool stays clean. Bugs stay out. No daily decisions about what to deploy or retract. They're not chasing a resort-level transformation — they want a clean, protected, functional outdoor room that works the same way every single day. That's a legitimate priority, and the screen enclosure delivers it reliably.
The homeowner who wants motorized screens values flexibility. They want the bugs gone when they're a problem and the space wide open when conditions are perfect. They care about the view. They want storm protection built into the system rather than bolted on as a separate expense. They're building toward something that feels more curated — the kind of layered outdoor space we'll break down in Blog 10 when we talk about closing the gap between your patio and a resort.
Neither homeowner is wrong.
The homeowner buying a screen enclosure is seeking protection. The homeowner buying a motorized screen is buying control.
Here's what nobody tells you in these comparison articles, because it doesn't help anyone sell anything: the biggest risk isn't choosing the wrong option between these two. The biggest risk is reading this article, nodding along, bookmarking it — and then doing nothing for another six months while you "think about it."
We talked about this in Blog 1 — contractor calendars fill fast, manufacturing takes weeks, and by the time summer heat and mosquito season hit full force, you're looking at installation timelines that push into fall. The homeowner who decides in February gets to enjoy the investment by April. The homeowner who decides in June is sitting in the same unprotected patio until September.
Both screen enclosures and motorized screens are good investments that transform how you use your outdoor space. The data from Blog 2's usability audit makes this clear — either option can double or triple your comfortable patio hours. The money will be well spent either way.
The only bad decision is no decision.
If the five questions above pointed you clearly toward one option, you have your answer. Schedule a consultation, get a site assessment for your specific space, and start the clock on installation.
If you're leaning toward motorized screens and want to understand the hurricane-protection angle more deeply, Blog 8 in this series — "One Investment, Two Problems" — walks through exactly how dual-purpose screen systems work and when the combined value makes the math irresistible.
If you're still on the fence, that's fine too. But pick a date — two weeks from today — and commit to a decision by then. Not a purchase. A decision. Call a screen enclosure company and a motorized screen specialist. Get both quotes for your actual space. Compare them against the framework in this article. And choose.
Your patio is waiting. The mosquitoes are not.
— Florida Living Outdoor | Part of "The Great Florida Thaw" series
A screened-in porch is a permanent, aluminum-framed structure with fixed mesh panels that provide continuous protection from bugs and debris. Motorized retractable screens deploy on demand via tracks and a motor, then retract completely when not needed. Screen enclosures are always in place; motorized screens appear and disappear at the press of a button.
If your primary concern is pool debris and you want passive, set-and-forget protection, a screen enclosure is a better fit. If you value view preservation, on-demand flexibility, and hurricane-rated protection from the same system, motorized retractable screens are the better fit. The decision depends more on lifestyle priorities than on product specs.
Neither is universally better. Motorized screens offer flexibility, view preservation, and hurricane ratings that screen enclosures can't match. Screen enclosures offer simplicity, lower upfront cost, and constant passive protection. The right answer depends on whether you value permanent coverage or on-demand control.
A standard screen enclosure in Florida costs $6,000 to $15,000. Motorized retractable screens cost $3,000 to $6,000 per opening, putting a full patio with three to four openings at $12,000 to $24,000. However, the ten-year total cost of ownership narrows the gap when rescreening costs and hurricane repair cycles are factored in for traditional enclosures.