Custom Port Orange Concrete serves Altamonte Springs with decorative concrete, driveway installation, pool deck resurfacing, and slab repair across this Seminole County suburb. We are Florida-licensed, pull Altamonte Springs permits on your behalf, and reply to every inquiry within one business day.

Altamonte Springs homeowners near Cranes Roost Park and Uptown Altamonte have increasingly updated their pool decks, patios, and driveways with decorative finishes to match the newer mixed-use development going up nearby. Our decorative concrete services include stamped overlays, exposed aggregate, and stained surfaces that improve curb appeal and hold up to Central Florida's heat and UV exposure without constant maintenance.
Screen enclosures and pool decks on homes built in the 1980s and 1990s are a fixture in Altamonte Springs, and many of those original concrete surfaces are now cracked, faded, or uneven from decades of Florida sun, pool chemical exposure, and the slight ground movement that comes with sandy Seminole County soil. We resurface and replace pool deck slabs with materials and finishes rated for poolside conditions.
Most driveways in Altamonte Springs were poured when the subdivisions were built in the 1970s through 1990s, and a large share of them are showing their age in the form of surface spalling, corner cracking, and edge settling from mature tree roots. We remove and replace driveways with properly compacted sub-bases and the right joint spacing for Seminole County's sandy soil, so the new surface holds position through the summer rain cycles.
Altamonte Springs gets heavy afternoon thunderstorms almost every day from June through September, and patios without proper slope away from the house direct that water toward the foundation with every storm. We pour patios with a consistent pitch toward a defined drainage path so you do not end up with standing water against the slab edge or the home's exterior wall every time the rain comes through.
Altamonte Springs is a dense city of about 9 square miles where pedestrian sidewalks connect neighborhoods to parks, transit stops, and the SunRail station. The mature live oaks and pines planted in many neighborhoods have roots that lift and crack older sidewalk panels over time, creating trip hazards that the city and property owners are responsible for correcting. We replace lifted or damaged sidewalk sections to City of Altamonte Springs specifications.
Front entry steps on Altamonte Springs homes from the 1970s and 1980s often show edge spalling, surface pitting, and hairline cracks from decades of Florida weather cycles. For townhome and apartment communities - common in this city given its dense mix of housing types - deteriorating steps are a liability issue that needs to be addressed before an HOA inspection or a tenant injury. We build replacement steps to Florida Building Code riser and tread dimensions.
Altamonte Springs is a fully built-out Seminole County city of roughly 45,000 people packed into about 9 square miles just north of Orlando. Almost all of the city's housing stock was constructed during the Florida suburban boom from the early 1970s through the late 1990s, which puts most homes in the 25-to-50-year-old range today. That age bracket means driveways, sidewalks, pool decks, and patio slabs from the original builds are now at or past their useful life. There is very little new land to develop in Altamonte Springs, so nearly all concrete work here is repair, replacement, or upgrade on an existing footprint rather than fresh new construction on a clean site. A contractor who treats every job like a new build on open land will miss the site constraints and soil history that matter on a 40-year-old lot.
The soil under most Altamonte Springs properties is the sandy, porous type common across Central Florida. Sandy soil drains quickly but also shifts as moisture levels change through the summer rainy season and the drier winter months. Flatwork poured without a properly compacted sub-base will settle unevenly over time as that soil moves beneath it. The mature tree canopy in many neighborhoods - live oaks and pines that have been growing for 30 to 50 years - adds root pressure to the problem, lifting slab edges and cracking concrete that was otherwise in decent shape. Florida's high UV index also degrades unprotected concrete surfaces faster here than in cooler climates, so sealing and surface treatment are maintenance steps that actually matter.
We pull permits through the City of Altamonte Springs Building Department for projects inside city limits and are familiar with the inspection process the city uses for concrete flatwork and structural slabs. Altamonte Springs is a Seminole County municipality, so projects on unincorporated parcels at the city edge fall under county jurisdiction - we know which authority applies to your address before we begin. Most of the homes we work on here are CBS construction from the 1970s through the 1990s, and we see the same pattern of issues on that era of homes repeatedly: settled driveways from sandy soil compaction, cracked pool decks from UV exposure and pool chemistry, and lifted sidewalk panels from live oak roots.
Altamonte Springs sits directly on Interstate 4, about 10 miles north of downtown Orlando, and is one of the easier Seminole County cities for us to reach from any direction. The city is centered around Cranes Roost Park and Uptown Altamonte near SR-436 (Semoran Boulevard), with residential neighborhoods spreading out from that core in all directions. We serve the full city, from the neighborhoods near Altamonte Mall to the quieter streets closer to Casselberry and Longwood on the city edges. Our nearby work in Sanford gives us familiarity with the range of Seminole County soil conditions and permit requirements that apply across the area.
We also serve homeowners in Kissimmee and other communities throughout the Central Florida corridor, so if your project spans multiple locations or you need work at a rental property elsewhere in the region, we can coordinate that without switching contractors.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form on this site and tell us what you need. We reply to every Altamonte Springs inquiry within one business day and schedule a site visit at a time that works for you.
We visit your Altamonte Springs property to measure the work area, check the existing sub-base condition, and identify any tree root or drainage factors that affect the approach. You receive a written, itemized estimate before anything is scheduled - no surprise costs after the job starts.
For jobs that require a permit through the City of Altamonte Springs Building Department, we handle the application and coordinate the inspection schedule. You do not need to manage the permit process - that is our job.
Our crew completes the pour and finishing on the scheduled day, cleans the work area, and walks you through cure timeline and care instructions before leaving. Most residential jobs in Altamonte Springs are one-day pours.
We serve the full city of Altamonte Springs and surrounding Seminole County. Written estimates, no sales pressure, one business day reply.
(386) 518-4720Altamonte Springs is a fully developed Seminole County city of roughly 45,000 residents sitting about 10 miles north of downtown Orlando along Interstate 4. The city grew quickly during the Florida suburban boom of the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, and today there is almost no undeveloped land left - making it one of the more densely built municipalities in the Orlando metro area. The built environment ranges from older single-family ranch-style homes in the established residential streets to large 1980s and 1990s apartment complexes near SR-436. For information about local development and public works, the City of Altamonte Springs website covers permitting, inspection requirements, and community services.
The city is best known for Cranes Roost Park, a waterfront public space centered on a lake in the heart of the city that serves as the venue for outdoor events year-round. Uptown Altamonte, the mixed-use development adjacent to the park, has added apartment living, restaurants, and retail that have drawn younger residents to the area. Altamonte Mall on SR-436 has been a central commercial landmark since the 1970s. The SunRail commuter train also stops in Altamonte Springs, connecting residents to Orlando, Sanford, and other stops along the I-4 corridor. Neighboring communities we also serve include Sanford to the northeast and Kissimmee to the south.
Durable concrete driveways designed for long-lasting curb appeal and everyday use.
Learn moreCustom concrete patios built to extend your outdoor living space beautifully.
Learn moreDecorative stamped concrete that mimics natural materials at a fraction of the cost.
Learn moreSafe, smooth concrete sidewalks installed to code for residential and commercial properties.
Learn moreStrong, smooth garage floor concrete that resists stains, cracks, and heavy loads.
Learn moreArtistic decorative concrete finishes that elevate any surface with color and texture.
Learn moreEngineered concrete retaining walls that manage soil erosion and enhance landscaping.
Learn moreProfessional concrete floor installation for homes, garages, and commercial spaces.
Learn moreSlip-resistant concrete pool decks that stay cool underfoot and look stunning.
Learn moreSolid concrete steps built for safety, strength, and lasting first impressions.
Learn moreReliable slab foundations poured and finished to support structures of any size.
Learn moreExpert foundation installation services ensuring a stable base for your building.
Learn moreHeavy-duty concrete parking lots designed for high traffic and minimal maintenance.
Learn moreProperly sized and poured concrete footings that anchor structures safely in the ground.
Learn moreFoundation raising and lifting services to correct settlement and restore structural integrity.
Learn morePrecision concrete cutting for repairs, expansions, and utility access projects.
Learn moreConcrete work in Altamonte Springs moves on a schedule - call or submit the form now to lock in your date before the summer rainy season fills the calendar.