
Ormond Beach Concrete is the concrete contractor Port Orange homeowners call for pool decks, driveways, and slab foundations. We have served the greater Volusia County area since 2025, we work in Port Orange regularly and know the sandy coastal conditions that determine how long concrete lasts here, and we reply to every inquiry within 1 business day.

Port Orange's year-round swimming season means pool decks take constant foot traffic, UV exposure, and wet-dry cycles that wear out weak surfaces fast. A properly installed concrete pool deck with slip-resistant texture holds up to that daily use without cracking or shifting. See our pool deck services.
Most Port Orange homes were built between the 1970s and 1990s, and original driveways from that era are cracking, settling, and past their useful life. A new poured concrete driveway with correct drainage slope handles Port Orange's heavy afternoon rains without pooling water at the garage.
Slab-on-grade foundations are nearly universal in Port Orange because of the high water table and sandy coastal soil. When a slab settles or cracks, a properly prepared replacement slab with adequate compacted base stops the problem from repeating.
Outdoor living is central to life in Port Orange, and a concrete patio gives homeowners a stable, level surface for furniture and grilling that does not shift or wash out during wet season rains the way pavers often do.
Properties near the Halifax River and lower-lying areas of Port Orange deal with soil movement and drainage pressure after heavy rains. A poured concrete retaining wall stabilizes grades and redirects runoff before it undermines your foundation or landscaping.
Tree root intrusion into sidewalks is common in Port Orange's older subdivisions, where mature trees have had decades to push up slabs. Replacing lifted sidewalk sections prevents trip hazards and keeps your property compliant with city sidewalk standards.
Port Orange grew rapidly between the 1970s and 1990s, and the housing stock reflects that era. Most single-family homes here are concrete block construction on slab-on-grade foundations - a standard Florida approach that performs well when installed correctly but develops specific problems over 30 to 50 years. Sandy coastal soil compacts inconsistently over time, especially near the Halifax River corridor and the lower-lying areas on the city's eastern side. Concrete poured on top of poorly settled sub-base eventually cracks, shifts, and requires replacement. A contractor who skips thorough base preparation is just creating a job for themselves a few years later.
Port Orange's climate adds another layer of stress. Daily afternoon thunderstorms during the wet season - roughly June through September - drive water under slabs and wash fine sand from sub-bases over years of repeated exposure. Pool decks, driveways, and patios all take the full force of this cycle. Homes near the Halifax River face additional flood zone considerations that affect drainage design and retaining wall requirements. Working within Port Orange's Building Division permitting process, and understanding how drainage requirements differ across neighborhoods, is part of doing this work correctly.
Our crew works throughout Port Orange regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. Port Orange homes - particularly the single-story ranch and Florida-style concrete block houses that make up most of the city's housing stock - require a contractor who knows what to expect underneath a 1980s slab. The soil profiles near Dunlawton Avenue, in the Spruce Creek area, and out toward the western subdivisions are not identical, and the work reflects those differences.
The Dunlawton Avenue corridor is the main spine of Port Orange, and most of the older residential neighborhoods sit north and south of it. Homes in these established areas are at the age where driveways, sidewalks, and pool decks from the original construction are due for replacement. In the Spruce Creek area and newer subdivisions further west, the properties are a different era and the concrete conditions vary accordingly. We assess each property on its own rather than assuming the whole city is the same.
Port Orange sits between two areas we also serve regularly. South Daytona is just north of Port Orange and shares similar soil and housing-age conditions. Homeowners in Daytona Beach also call us regularly, and we are familiar with how conditions shift across the Halifax River corridor.
We respond within 1 business day. Let us know what you need and where the property is, and we schedule a site visit at no cost to you.
We review the site, check drainage and soil conditions, and give you a written estimate that itemizes base preparation, materials, and finishing. You know what you are paying for before any work starts.
If your project needs a City of Port Orange permit, we file it. Most permits take one to two weeks. Once approved, you get a confirmed start date.
We arrive on the scheduled day, complete the work, and clean up. You get a walkthrough and written curing instructions so you know when the surface is ready to use.
We serve Port Orange with the same crew that handles Ormond Beach and Daytona Beach. Free estimate, no obligation, and a response within 1 business day.
(386) 284-1728Port Orange is a mid-sized city in Volusia County with roughly 65,000 residents, sitting directly south of Daytona Beach along the Halifax River. It grew rapidly from the 1970s through the 1990s, transforming from a small community into one of Volusia County's largest cities in just a few decades. The result is a city with a strong sense of permanent, owner-occupied residential character - people put down roots here. The housing stock is predominantly single-family concrete block homes from that growth era, with ranch-style floor plans, attached garages, and slab foundations. The Spruce Creek fly-in community, where residents can taxi private planes directly to home hangars, is one of the most distinctive and widely recognized neighborhoods in all of Volusia County. For concrete contractor permits and inspections in Port Orange, the City of Port Orange Building Division handles the review process.
Dunlawton Avenue runs east to west through the heart of Port Orange, connecting US-1 to the barrier island and serving as the main daily artery for most residents. The Halifax River forms the city's western boundary and connects to the Intracoastal Waterway, giving Port Orange its coastal character without being a beach resort. Properties near the river deal with elevated humidity, occasional tidal flooding, and salt air exposure that accelerates wear on exterior surfaces. We serve homeowners throughout Port Orange and the surrounding corridor, including South Daytona to the north and the broader Volusia County service territory.
We work throughout Port Orange and respond within 1 business day. Call now or submit a request and we will get back to you with a written estimate at no charge.