Concrete driveway building
Durable, professionally poured concrete driveways built to handle Florida weather and daily traffic.
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Daytona Beach Concrete Company provides concrete pool decks, driveways, and slab work across Palm Coast, FL, serving the ITT-era neighborhoods and canal-front properties that define this city since 2023.
Palm Coast homes were mostly built in the 1970s through 1990s on sandy Flagler County soil - many with backyards that border the city's canal network. We know what that means for base prep, drainage, and how long your concrete will hold up.

Single-family ranch homes with in-ground pools are one of the most common property types in Palm Coast, and many of those pool decks were poured during the original ITT development era - meaning they are now 30 to 50 years old. We install new concrete pool decks with heat-reflective finishes and proper drainage slopes that account for the sandy soil underneath and the heavy Florida rain above.
Most driveways in Palm Coast were built alongside the original ITT homes in the 1970s through 1990s. After decades of Florida sun, tropical storm runoff, and the constant shifting of sandy Flagler County soil, cracked and sunken driveways are one of the most common concrete problems we see here. We install new driveways with a properly compacted base that stays flat for years, not just seasons.
Palm Coast's long outdoor season and the screened lanai culture that defines most homes here make a durable backyard patio one of the most practical investments a homeowner can make. Many properties back up to the canal network, which means drainage is a real design consideration - we slope every patio away from your home and the water's edge.
Virtually every home in Palm Coast is built on a slab-on-grade foundation - the standard for Florida's high water table. When sandy soil beneath a slab shifts after heavy rain or a dry spell, you can end up with cracked floors, sticking doors, and uneven surfaces. We assess and pour new foundation slabs built for the specific soil and drainage conditions on your lot.
Canal-adjacent lots in Palm Coast often have gradual slopes toward the water that cause erosion and make it hard to use the back portion of the yard. A concrete retaining wall can stabilize the grade, hold soil in place after heavy rain, and give you a flat, usable yard between your home and the canal's edge.
Palm Coast was built almost entirely during the ITT Community Development Corporation era of the 1970s through the 1990s. That means most homes in the city are now between 25 and 55 years old - squarely in the range where driveways, patios, pool decks, and slabs have been absorbing Florida sun, storm rain, and soil movement for decades. Concrete block construction with stucco exteriors is the standard build throughout the older sections, and while it holds up well, the flatwork around those homes needs attention at this age.
The soil under Palm Coast is the defining challenge. The city sits on sandy coastal soil that drains quickly in some spots and holds water near the canal network. That shifting, inconsistent ground puts constant stress on concrete slabs and driveways. When tropical storms hit - Palm Coast was significantly impacted by Hurricane Matthew in 2016 and Hurricane Irma in 2017 - the combination of wind, saturated ground, and heavy runoff accelerates cracking and settlement in any flatwork that was not built with proper base preparation. A contractor who skips that prep step is setting you up for repairs within a few years.
We pull permits through Flagler County Growth Management for every concrete job we do in Palm Coast. The permitting process in Flagler County has specific inspection steps for pool deck and flatwork projects, and we go through it regularly enough to know what is required and how to keep the timeline moving. We have done concrete work across Palm Coast's residential sections since we started serving Flagler County.
Palm Coast is a city that feels different from one section to the next. The older neighborhoods off Palm Coast Parkway, near Town Center, have the tightest concentration of ITT-era homes - modest single-story ranch houses on lots that back up to canals. The Grand Haven area and the Hammock neighborhoods along the Intracoastal Waterway have larger, newer homes with different maintenance profiles. Whether you are near Washington Oaks Gardens State Park on the south end or up in the sections closest to Flagler Beach on the east side, our crew has worked on homes across the city.
We also serve the areas directly surrounding Palm Coast. Homeowners in DeLand call us for foundation and slab work, and our crews travel regularly to jobs along the I-95 corridor between Palm Coast and Ormond Beach to the south.
We respond within 1 business day to schedule a free on-site visit. Pricing a Palm Coast job over the phone is not accurate - we need to see your lot, check the soil near any canal line, and measure the area before we can give you a real number.
We assess the existing surface, check drainage and slope, and walk through your options in plain language. You get a written estimate that covers demo, base prep, the pour, control joints, and the Flagler County permit fee. No add-ons after you sign.
We submit the Flagler County permit application before any crew shows up. Permit approval typically takes one to two weeks. Once approved, we give you a firm start date. Most residential jobs in Palm Coast begin within two weeks of permit approval.
The crew handles demolition, base compaction, forming, and the pour - usually one day for a standard residential project. Concrete needs at least seven days before vehicle traffic. A Flagler County inspector signs off, and we do a final walkthrough with you before closing the job.
We serve all of Palm Coast - from the canal neighborhoods off Palm Coast Parkway to the Hammock area along the Intracoastal. Response within 1 business day.
(386) 278-1096Palm Coast is Flagler County's largest city, with a population that has grown from around 32,000 in 2000 to roughly 100,000 today - making it one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States for much of the past two decades. It began as a massive planned community developed by ITT Community Development Corporation starting in the early 1970s, and the city was not incorporated until 1999. That history explains why so much of the housing stock is concentrated in a narrow age range - most homes were built between 1970 and 2000, and they share the same CBS construction style, modest lot sizes, and screened lanai layouts. Many of those lots back up to Palm Coast's extensive network of freshwater canals, which defines the character of dozens of residential neighborhoods throughout the city. The area around Town Center along Palm Coast Parkway serves as the city's civic and commercial hub.
Palm Coast is bordered by Flagler Beach to the east, where most residents go to swim and use the fishing pier, and by large stretches of protected forest land to the west and south. Washington Oaks Gardens State Park, just south of the city along the Matanzas River, is one of the most visited natural sites in the area, known for its coquina rock formations and formal gardens. The city sits on Florida's northeast Atlantic coast, which gives it a mild climate but also puts it in the path of tropical storms moving up the coastline. Homeowners in DeLand and other nearby inland communities often share the same storm exposure without the salt air factor that affects properties closer to the coast.
Durable, professionally poured concrete driveways built to handle Florida weather and daily traffic.
Learn moreCustom concrete patios that extend your living space and add lasting value to your property.
Learn moreDecorative stamped patterns that mimic stone, brick, or tile at a fraction of the cost.
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Learn moreColor, texture, and pattern options that turn plain concrete into an eye-catching surface.
Learn moreEngineered concrete retaining walls that control erosion and reshape challenging terrain.
Learn moreInterior and exterior concrete floor installations finished to your desired texture and sheen.
Learn moreSlip-resistant, heat-reflective concrete pool decks built for comfort and durability in the Florida sun.
Learn moreSolid concrete steps and entryways crafted for safety, curb appeal, and long-term performance.
Learn moreReinforced concrete slab foundations engineered for Florida soil conditions and load requirements.
Learn moreComplete foundation installations for new construction and addition projects throughout the region.
Learn moreCommercial concrete parking lots designed for high traffic volume, drainage, and longevity.
Learn morePrecision concrete footings that provide a stable base for walls, posts, and structural columns.
Learn moreFoundation raising services that restore level, stable support to settling or damaged structures.
Learn moreClean, precise concrete cutting for repairs, utility access, and renovation projects of all sizes.
Learn moreWhether your home is on a canal lot, in one of the older ITT-era sections, or in a newer Palm Coast community, we handle the Flagler County permits and deliver concrete work built for this area.