
Carports and Structural Integrity
Learn how carports support structural integrity for homes in Bradenton. Protect your investment from heavy rain damage.
We build carports, sunrooms & pool cages Fort Myers homeowners rely on to protect their property and extend how they use it.
Lee County has been in active rebuild mode since Hurricane Ian made Category 4 landfall at Cayo Costa in September 2022. That storm destroyed or badly damaged thousands of carports, pool cages, and sunrooms across Fort Myers, Fort Myers Beach, Estero, and Lehigh Acres. Three years later, replacement demand is still running and the code requirements on every new structure have tightened under the Florida Building Code 8th Edition.
ComBid Pro runs crews across Fort Myers, Estero, San Carlos Park, Gateway, Lehigh Acres, and the wider Lee County area. Carports, sunrooms & pool cages in Fort Myers all go through the same in-house team: design, permitting through Lee County Development Services, fabrication at ComBid Metals, and installation. No subcontractors at any stage.
Fort Myers, FL — 265+ days. Average annual sunny days at Southwest Florida International Airport, one of the highest concentrations of outdoor living demand in the continental U.S. Source: NOAA Climate Normals, Southwest Florida International Airport (RSW).
Design wind speed (Fort Myers)
Average annual rainfall
Sunny days per year
County residents
Hurricane season window
Florida Building Code (2023)
Three services drive most of our Fort Myers work. Each one is engineered to the Florida Building Code 8th Edition (2023), filed through Lee County Development Services, and built with aluminum produced by our manufacturing arm, ComBid Metals.
Insulated and non-insulated sunrooms Fort Myers, FL homeowners use as living rooms, offices, enclosed patios, hobby rooms, and year-round gathering spaces. The packages are specified for local wind loads, roofs are tied into the existing home, and four-season builds can include HVAC integration where needed.
Fort Myers pool cages help protect the pool area from insects, debris, sun exposure, and storm-season wear. We build new pool cages, replacement cages, and pool enclosures Fort Myers, FL properties need after age, corrosion, or storm damage makes the existing frame unreliable.
Screen options run from standard mesh to no-see-um and pet-grade. We handle residential and commercial pool cages Fort Myers, FL properties need, with every installation planned around the pool layout, deck condition, anchor points, roofline, and local code requirements.
Attached, freestanding, RV, and custom carports Fort Myers homeowners use for daily vehicles, boats, golf carts, trailers, and RVs. Frames are sized for the span, roofs are matched to the home, and the design is coordinated with the driveway, side yard, drainage, and property setbacks.
For many Fort Myers homes without enough garage space, a carport is one of the most practical ways to protect vehicles without building a full addition.
Lee County has been in the direct path of some of the most damaging storms to hit Florida’s Gulf coast. Past storms explain why every carport, sunroom, and pool cage in Fort Myers requires project-specific engineering. Category and wind speed are reference points. Final structural decisions come from engineered design pressures specific to the property address.
A Category 4 hurricane at Florida landfall, with significant wind and surge impacts reported across the Lee County coast and the Fort Myers area.
Reference wind: About 130 mph sustained wind at Florida landfall. NHC historical reference.
Why it matters: Gulf-coast exposure can produce major wind and surge effects well beyond the direct landfall point. Lee County properties in open or coastal positions carry that exposure regardless of exact storm track.
NHC reports Category 4 landfall at Cayo Costa, a barrier island in Lee County. The eyewall crossed directly through Pine Island and into Charlotte County. Fort Myers Beach, Sanibel, and Captiva sustained significant wind and surge damage. Many structures built before the post-Charley Florida Building Code update were destroyed or badly damaged.
Reference wind: Category 4, about 150 mph sustained wind at Cayo Costa landfall.
Why it matters: Charley's Cayo Costa landfall put Lee County at the center of the most intense wind zone. The storm proved that barrier islands and the Fort Myers mainland face direct-hit exposure. Post-Charley code changes raised the engineering bar on everything built in Lee County since 2004.
NHC advisories tracked Irma along Florida's west coast after a Category 4 landfall in the Lower Keys. Lee County experienced hurricane-force winds with widespread structural damage across Fort Myers, Estero, and Bonita Springs.
Reference wind: Category 4 around the Lower Keys at about 130 mph sustained, with hurricane conditions reaching Lee County.
Why it matters: Large wind fields affect wide coastal corridors simultaneously. Irma confirmed that Lee County sits well within the active storm zone and that sustained wind events test every connection point on an aluminum structure.
NHC Tropical Cyclone Report states Ian made Category 4 landfall at Cayo Costa, directly impacting Lee County with catastrophic wind and storm surge. Fort Myers Beach was effectively destroyed. Pine Island and Sanibel were cut off after their causeways failed. Thousands of pool cages, carports, and sunrooms across Fort Myers, Estero, Lehigh Acres, and San Carlos Park were damaged or destroyed. Demand for pool cages Fort Myers and carport replacement reached levels not seen in the county's modern history.
Reference wind: Category 4, about 150 mph sustained wind at Cayo Costa landfall.
Why it matters: Ian was the most destructive hurricane to hit Lee County in the modern code era. It confirmed that every aluminum structure in the county needs to be engineered to current FBC requirements, and that the rebuild demand following a direct hit can last for years.
NHC Tropical Cyclone Report states Milton made Category 3 landfall on Siesta Key in Sarasota County, generating tropical storm conditions across Lee County. Two major Gulf Coast storm events within two years for the Fort Myers area.
Reference wind: Category 3, about 120 mph sustained wind at Siesta Key landfall.
Why it matters: A Sarasota-area storm still generates wind and structural demand across Lee County. Back-to-back exposure from Ian and Milton within two years confirmed that annual storm risk across Southwest Florida is not theoretical.
No one can predict when the next storm will affect Lee County.
Inspect your structure now. Checking connections, fasteners, and attachment points before storm season helps identify weak areas while repairs are still manageable. Corroded screws, loose anchor points, and stressed connection zones are common on pool enclosures Fort Myers, FL and other structures that survived Ian but were never fully assessed after landfall.
Customer tip: Secure your project scope and price early. After direct-hit events like Ian, demand across Lee County rises fast and pricing follows.
Historical storms are reference context only. Final frame sizes, spans, roof systems, and anchor schedules are set by current engineered plans and Lee County permit review for the specific project address.
Use this selector to review practical planning guidance for Lee County projects. All values adjust by engineering for the specific address, exposure category, and design pressure requirements. Final specifications are confirmed by engineering drawings and Lee County permit review.
Primary focus is roof uplift, frame spacing, and base anchoring. Carports in Lee County can be standalone or part of a combined scope that includes a sunroom or covered porch zone.
Standard layouts start with 3x3 aluminum posts. Final spacing is selected from roof area, tributary load, and design pressures for the specific Lee County address.
SMB 2x6 layouts are commonly around 10 ft beam spans. SMB 2x8 layouts are commonly around 14 ft where engineering allows. These are planning references, not guaranteed spans.
Roof-to-beam and beam-to-post connections are detailed for uplift transfer and continuity. Especially important on waterfront and Caloosahatchee River corridor properties in Fort Myers and Estero.
Standard for open carports Fort Myers. Clear spans are commonly around 8'-5" to 11'-2" depending on panel thickness, exposure, and design pressure table selection.
Used when shade comfort is part of the scope or when matching an adjacent enclosed zone. Planning ranges can extend into the high teens and low twenties in feet at lighter load cases, subject to final engineering check.
When carports connect to other structures on Fort Myers properties, roof transitions are detailed as separate engineered zones within the same permit package.
Anchor type, embedment, spacing, and edge distance are set from uplift and lateral demand. Waterfront sites near the Caloosahatchee River and Fort Myers Beach carry higher demand and require corrosion-resistant hardware.
Existing slab use depends on condition and thickness. Pre-Ian and pre-2004 slabs across Fort Myers require additional assessment before final anchor schedules are confirmed.
Roof, beam, post, anchor, and concrete interface are verified as one continuous load path from roof panel to foundation.
Standalone parking cover or first zone in a combined layout. Common for vehicle, boat, and RV protection in Fort Myers, Estero, and San Carlos Park.
20-foot one-car carport plus an attached 10-foot screened room zone. A 20-foot single clear span on standard 3-inch riser pans is not a standard assumption without intermediate support or system upgrades.
Each connected zone is treated as its own engineered segment, then coordinated as one permit-ready package through Lee County Development Services.
Usually standalone. In some Lee County projects, it starts at the edge of an existing covered patio. We handle residential and commercial pool enclosures Fort Myers, FL. Post-Ian rebuild demand has been highest across Fort Myers, Fort Myers Beach, and Estero.
Member spacing and grid geometry are set from enclosure height, shape, and site loads. 2x2 or 2x3 enclosure members are the common planning starting point, then adjusted by engineering where design pressure demands require it.
Support locations are set for screen performance and frame deflection control. Screen options include standard 18x14 mesh, no-see-um, and pet-grade for pool screen enclosures Fort Myers, FL.
Edge and corner regions carry the highest wind concentration. Particularly relevant for Caloosahatchee River waterfront and coastal addresses in Fort Myers and Fort Myers Beach.
Top enclosure zones are designed from project-specific pressure criteria and approved details under FBC 8th Edition.
When a pool cage starts at a patio edge, connection and transition geometry are treated as a separate engineered detail within the same permit package.
Deflection limits are set so enclosure behavior stays within design expectations over the life of the structure.
Perimeter anchoring is set from geometry, pressure zones, and support condition. Coastal and waterfront Lee County addresses require corrosion-resistant hardware.
Slab edge distance and concrete condition are checked before final anchor scheduling. Pre-Ian and pre-2004 pool decks across Fort Myers require additional assessment.
Frame to base anchoring is verified as one continuous load-transfer path through the Lee County permit package.
Standalone pool cages Fort Myers, FL in most projects, including custom pool cages Fort Myers, FL homeowners request for irregular pool shapes or oversized decks. Post-Ian rebuild demand has been highest across Fort Myers, Fort Myers Beach, and Estero.
Sometimes starts at the outer edge of a covered patio or porch. Permitted as a combined scope through Lee County Development Services.
Even when connected at an edge, the cage follows its own enclosure engineering details, separate from the adjacent structure zone.
Enclosed walls with screen or panel options and a roof system above. Three-season and four-season configurations available for Fort Myers properties. Each project is engineered to Florida Building Code 8th Edition design pressures for the specific property address.
Used for lighter enclosed wall sections on shorter spans where project loads and openings allow.
Used where openings, wall height, or Lee County design pressure demand require additional capacity. Common on waterfront and Caloosahatchee River corridor exposure sites.
Door and large opening zones are priority support regions. Wall panel and screen package selection is specified for Lee County wind load requirements.
Planning clear span is approximately 8'-5" to 11'-2" depending on panel thickness, pressure, and exposure category for the Fort Myers address.
Used when heat control is part of the intended room use. Particularly relevant for sunrooms Fort Myers, FL used as a year-round living or office space. Can allow longer planning spans than standard riser panels, subject to engineering checks.
Roof and wall tie-ins to the existing home are finalized by engineering details. Lee County requires a licensed Florida engineer's sign-off on all attachment points.
Anchor selection follows design pressure and existing concrete conditions. Inland properties in Lehigh Acres, Gateway, and Buckingham typically use standard tapcon anchoring into sound concrete slab.
Pre-2004 slabs across Fort Myers require additional assessment before final anchor schedules are confirmed.
Walls, roof, frame, anchors, and foundation are checked as one full system per FBC 8th Edition requirements.
Standalone enclosed room or part of a mixed structure layout. Adds usable square footage to properties in Fort Myers, Estero, and San Carlos Park.
20-foot carport zone plus 10-foot screened sunroom zone with different roof panel selections per area. Filed as one permit package through Lee County Development Services.
Each zone is designed for its own intended use, then coordinated as one engineering package and single Lee County permit application.
Some Fort Myers projects cover a single structure. Many do not. A carport, a sunroom, and a covered porch on the same property are each engineered to their own specs: frame spacing, roof system, and anchoring set by zone. When the scope covers multiple structures, those zones are coordinated into one permit package through Lee County Development Services. Fort Myers pool cages usually stand alone, though some start at a covered patio edge.
One-car carport around 20 feet plus a 10-foot screened room zone is a common request in Fort Myers and Estero. Carport roof can use one panel system while the screened room uses a different roof panel system. A 20-foot single clear roof-pan span is not a standard assumption without intermediate support.
Each structure zone is reviewed for its own frame spacing, roof span, anchoring, and attachment details before final installation sequencing. Planning references: 3x3 posts, SMB 2x6 around 10 ft, SMB 2x8 around 14 ft, and 2x2 or 2x3 enclosure framing for enclosed walls.
Mixed projects are filed as one coordinated package through Lee County Development Services. Transitions between open and enclosed zones are clearly defined in the engineered drawings before submission.
There is no public number that applies to every Lee County property. Final structural performance is based on project-specific design pressures and engineering calculations for the specific address, exposure category, and proximity to the Caloosahatchee River and Gulf coast.
Designed by engineering and built under Florida Building Code 8th Edition to withstand the calculated design pressure loads for that specific structure and Lee County address. This is the accurate framing. Not a category rating or a fixed mph promise.
Same code path across all structures. Different geometry and use mean different engineering details by zone. ComBid Pro coordinates every zone through one in-house team. No subcontractors at any stage.
Built to project-specific engineered design pressures under Florida Building Code 8th Edition requirements. Final values are always confirmed by engineering drawings and Lee County permit review for the property address.
Review My LayoutEvery Fort Myers project runs on the same four steps, handled by ComBid Pro employees. No subcontractor handoffs.
Call or submit a quote request. We confirm the property address, ask a few sizing questions, and book a no-cost site visit. Fort Myers site visits are scheduled as soon as possible, usually the next day or whenever works for you.
For your Fort Myers sunroom, pool cage, or carport, you get a fixed price estimate and engineered drawings that account for the property, structure type, and local requirements.
Our in-house permitting team prepares and files the required documents. Aluminum components are cut and finished at ComBid Metals while the permit moves through review.
A ComBid Pro crew installs your sunroom, pool cage, or carport, coordinates the inspection, and walks the finished build with you. We handle final cleanup and warranty paperwork before the project is closed out.
Fort Myers has no shortage of aluminum contractors, especially since Ian accelerated rebuild demand across Lee County. The difference shows up in how the work is organized, how clearly the project is managed, and how your structure performs years after install.
Our permit coordinators handle every filing with Lee County Development Services and know how to prepare a complete package. That keeps your project moving and reduces the risk of back-and-forth once review begins.
We own the supply chain. Our manufacturing division, ComBid Metals, produces the aluminum used on the carports, pool cages, and sunrooms we build in Fort Myers, FL. That means consistent material quality, better schedule control, and a single warranty path if something ever needs to be addressed.
Every person on your job site is a ComBid Pro employee. The crew lead responsible for the work has direct accountability for the final result.
Every structure we build is designed around Florida Building Code requirements and the specific conditions of your lot. Wind exposure, uplift loads, anchoring, drainage, and roofline integration are all part of the planning.
Structure pricing in Fort Myers depends on type, size, enclosure needs, frame layout, roof system, tie-ins, anchors, slab or footing condition, engineering, permitting, and finish details. Waterfront sites along the Caloosahatchee River and coastal properties in Fort Myers Beach and Estero often carry different anchor and framing requirements than inland Lee County addresses.
Carport / Covered Porch
Sunroom / Enclosed Zone
Pool Cage / Mixed Layout
We work with WiseStack to offer flexible monthly options on qualifying projects. Once your estimate is complete, you’ll receive a personalized link tied to your specific quote, with your project scope and totals already included.
Yes. Most aluminum structures, including sunrooms, pool cages, and carports, require a building permit. Fort Myers properties typically go through Lee County Development Services. We handle the full submission process, including HOA coordination where applicable.
Most carport and pool cage projects run six to ten weeks from signed estimate. Sunroom builds typically run eight to twelve weeks, longer if four-season HVAC and electrical are included. Final timing depends on project scope, permitting, material selection, and inspection scheduling.
Yes. Fort Myers is part of our core Southwest Florida service area. We build the pool cages, sunrooms, and carports Fort Myers, FL homeowners need. We work regularly across Lee County: Estero, San Carlos Park, Lehigh Acres, Gateway, and surrounding communities.
We calculate the required wind load for your specific lot based on the property address, structure type, exposure category, and applicable Florida Building Code requirements. Waterfront, coastal, and open-lot properties may require different specifications than more protected inland properties. Lee County design wind speeds range from 150 to 170 mph depending on location.
Typically yes, by a small amount, because the structure adds insured value to the property. Some insurers may also consider code-compliant, storm-hardened construction positively. Check with your carrier for the final answer.
Of the three, carports are typically the smallest investment. Sunrooms and pool cages run higher, with four-season sunroom builds at the top end. Final price depends on size, frame grade, panel system, site conditions, and permitting requirements. We give you a fixed price estimate after the site visit.
Yes, on qualifying projects. We work with WiseStack to offer flexible monthly options. Once your estimate is complete, you'll receive a personalized link tied to your specific quote where you can review terms and apply directly.
Scope of work, engineered drawings, materials list, fixed price, permit responsibility, timeline, payment schedule, and warranty terms. Plain English, no industry shorthand.
Yes. ComBid Pro carries the required Florida contractor licensing to file and build in Lee County, plus full general liability and workers' compensation coverage. Documentation is available on request.
No. Every crew member is a ComBid Pro employee. Design, manufacturing through ComBid Metals, permitting, and installation are all handled in-house.
Because we control every part of the work. Design, permitting, manufacturing, and installation are handled by one team. That gives you clearer communication, better schedule control, and fewer handoffs from estimate to final walkthrough.
ComBid Pro serves Fort Myers and the surrounding Lee County communities as part of our core Southwest Florida service footprint. We cover Lee, Sarasota, Manatee, and Charlotte counties, which means we understand the permitting, weather, and structural requirements that shape local aluminum projects.
Our Fort Myers area coverage includes:
Looking for a project outside Fort Myers? We also serve Sarasota, Bradenton, Venice, North Port, Port Charlotte, Cape Coral, and nearby Southwest Florida communities.
See what homeowners across Southwest Florida have shared about working with ComBid Pro and the experience they had with us.
“Konstantin and his team installed seamless gutters on our home and the quality was unmatched. Clean install, fair pricing, and professional from start to finish.”
Sarah K.
Sarasota, FL
“ComBid Pro replaced our soffit and fascia after the storm. The crew showed up on time every day and the work looks brand new. Highly recommend.”
Daniel P.
Lakewood Ranch, FL
“I needed a carport built quickly before hurricane season and Konstantin made it happen. Smooth process, fair price, and the structure is rock solid.”
Michael R.
Venice, FL
“Best contractor experience we've had. Honest estimate, no surprises on the bill, and the gutters drain perfectly even in the heaviest rain.”
Linda T.
North Port, FL
“ComBid Pro built our pool cage and we couldn't be happier. The team handled the permits, did the structural work, and finished on schedule.”
Robert J.
Bradenton, FL
“They installed a tongue and groove ceiling on our patio. Beautiful cypress work — turned out to be the highlight of our backyard. Will definitely use again.”
Maria L.
Sarasota, FL
If your Fort Myers project goes beyond the three core services, here is the rest of what we build.

Learn how carports support structural integrity for homes in Bradenton. Protect your investment from heavy rain damage.

Find out how to choose the right carport for your needs in Venice. Protect your home effectively from heavy rain.

Discover how carports enhance home protection in Sarasota. Safeguard your property from heavy rain and water damage.
If you are planning a carport, sunroom, or pool cage in Fort Myers, start with a free site visit from a ComBid Pro project lead. We will measure the property, review the structure, check the local requirements, and prepare a clear fixed price estimate for your project.