
Boynton Beach Concrete & Masonry delivers walkway construction, tuckpointing, and retaining wall services throughout Coral Springs, FL. We have served Broward County homeowners since 2020 and reply to every inquiry within one business day.

Coral Springs was developed as a master-planned community, and the original concrete walkways in many neighborhoods are now 35 to 50 years old, cracked, and no longer level. Our walkway construction service replaces aging paths with new concrete or paver walkways built to current drainage requirements, which is especially important on canal-adjacent lots where grading matters.
Homes built in Coral Springs during the 1970s and 1980s have mortar joints that have been cycling through South Florida wet and dry seasons for four decades. Tuckpointing removes deteriorating mortar and repoints with fresh material before moisture reaches the block cores, which is far less expensive than block replacement.
Many Coral Springs lots with canal or retention pond frontage have experienced erosion along the rear property line. A properly built retaining wall stabilizes the bank, prevents further soil loss, and meets Broward County setback requirements for waterfront lots.
Coral Springs HOAs frequently permit paver driveways as a higher-end alternative to poured concrete. We work with HOA boards and homeowners to select approved materials and finishes that meet community guidelines while improving drainage and curb appeal.
Tile roofs and stucco exteriors are the standard in Coral Springs, and stucco cracking is common on homes of this age after hurricane-season rain and UV exposure. Masonry restoration on Coral Springs homes addresses the underlying CBS wall surface before recoating, so the repair lasts.
Privacy walls and garden walls are common in Coral Springs planned neighborhoods, and older walls sometimes lean or crack after years of ground movement. We build replacement concrete block walls to current Broward County hurricane wind load requirements, which is not optional for new construction here.
Coral Springs was built as a master-planned community starting in the 1960s, and the majority of its housing stock went up between the late 1960s and early 1990s. That 25-year building boom produced a city full of structurally similar homes - concrete block construction, stucco exteriors, and flat or low-slope tile roofs - that are now in the 30-to-55-year maintenance window. Tile roofs and stucco exteriors perform well in South Florida, but they are not maintenance-free. Mortar joints on CBS homes degrade under decades of humidity, heat, and hurricane-season pressure, and stucco surfaces crack as the block beneath expands and contracts. A masonry contractor working in Coral Springs needs to understand these materials because most of the city's homes are built with them.
The high homeownership rate in Coral Springs, around 70%, means most residents are long-term owners with a real stake in the condition of their property. That also means HOA rules are a real part of every exterior project, and contractors need to know how to work within those approval processes without holding up the job. Beyond HOA logistics, the flat terrain and extensive canal system create drainage challenges that affect masonry work near the rear of lots. Coral Springs receives roughly 60 inches of rain per year, almost all of it during the June through October wet season, and poorly drained walkways, driveways, or retaining walls near water will fail faster than the same work in a drier climate.
Our crew works throughout Coral Springs regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect masonry contractor work here. Coral Springs is one of the largest cities in Broward County by population, and its planned layout means most job sites are accessible off University Drive, Sample Road, or Wiles Road. We are familiar with the City of Coral Springs permit and inspection process for both structural masonry and flatwork, and we factor HOA approval timelines into every project schedule.
The city sits at the western edge of Broward County, inland from the coast and close to the Everglades edge. That inland position means hotter summer temperatures and less ocean breeze than coastal cities nearby, which accelerates UV damage on exterior masonry surfaces. Many properties back up to canals or retention ponds - particularly in the neighborhoods around Mullins Park and the central corridors - and those lots require extra drainage planning for any flatwork near the rear of the property. The Coral Springs Center for the Arts and Mullins Park are central landmarks most residents know, and we have worked in the neighborhoods surrounding both.
We serve the neighboring Margate community to the south, and tie all the way back to our home base in Boynton Beach, so our crew is well positioned for jobs anywhere across this corridor.
Call (561) 423-4851 or submit the contact form. We reply within one business day and schedule a site visit that fits your calendar, with no requirement to take time off work.
We assess the full scope of work at your Coral Springs home and provide a written estimate with no pressure to sign immediately. If HOA approval is needed, we can provide documentation to support your HOA application.
For permitted structural work, we handle the city permit application. Most residential masonry jobs in Coral Springs begin within one to two weeks of permit approval, and you will receive a clear start date before the job begins.
We walk the completed work with you, answer any questions, and clear all materials from the property. We confirm the permit inspection is closed with the City of Coral Springs before marking the job complete.
No obligation. We serve all of Coral Springs and reply within one business day.
(561) 423-4851Coral Springs is one of the largest cities in Broward County, with a population of around 134,000 people. It was developed as a master-planned community beginning in 1963, and most of its homes were built between the late 1960s and early 1990s. That planned character shows in the city's layout: uniform lot sizes in most neighborhoods, consistent architectural styles, and an extensive canal and retention pond system that runs through the residential fabric. The homeownership rate is about 70%, and the median home value reflects a stable, family-oriented community that takes property maintenance seriously. Civic landmarks like the Coral Springs Center for the Arts, Mullins Park, and the Coral Springs Museum of Art are well known to long-term residents. You can read more about the city at the Coral Springs, Florida Wikipedia article.
The housing stock is almost entirely CBS construction with stucco exteriors and tile or low-slope roofs, with single-family homes making up the majority and a notable share of condos and townhomes in the eastern and central parts of the city. Many properties back up to canals or retention ponds, which affects drainage planning for any exterior masonry work. Coral Springs sits at the western edge of Broward County, close to the Everglades, and its inland position means more intense summer heat than coastal communities. Homeowners here in neighboring Coconut Creek or Margate can also contact us - we serve the full Broward County corridor.
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Learn MoreCall (561) 423-4851 or submit a form today. We serve all of Coral Springs and neighboring Broward County communities, and we reply within one business day.