South Florida Commercial Concrete and Structural Contractors

Commercial concrete and structural work forms the physical backbone of every building project in South Florida — from ground-level foundations and tilt-up wall panels to post-tensioned parking decks and high-rise cores. This page describes the contractor categories, licensing classifications, technical standards, and regulatory conditions that govern commercial concrete and structural work across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties. The sector operates under Florida state licensing law, local building department authority, and a layered set of wind and flood-resistance requirements that exceed most other U.S. jurisdictions.


Definition and scope

Commercial concrete and structural contractors in South Florida hold state-issued licenses under the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR, Florida Statute Chapter 489). Two primary license categories govern this work:

  1. Certified General Contractor (CGC) — authorized to perform structural concrete work as part of a broader project scope.
  2. Certified Specialty Contractor — Concrete — limited to concrete placement, forming, finishing, and post-tension work; cannot self-perform all trades on a project.

Within the structural category, work divides into distinct technical subcategories:

Scope limitations matter here: a concrete specialty contractor cannot serve as the prime on a project requiring full MEP coordination unless a general contractor of record is also engaged. Projects requiring structural engineering of record must be stamped by a licensed Professional Engineer registered in Florida (Florida Board of Professional Engineers).

Geographic scope and coverage: This page covers commercial concrete and structural contracting within the tri-county South Florida metro — Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties. It does not address residential concrete (single-family or duplex), agricultural structures, or projects located outside these three counties. Monroe County (Florida Keys), Martin County, and municipalities falling outside the metro boundary are not covered. Each county operates its own building department with distinct permit intake procedures; see Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach contractor jurisdiction differences for county-specific procedural detail.


How it works

Structural concrete work on commercial projects in South Florida follows a defined regulatory and construction sequence:

  1. Design phase — A licensed structural engineer produces stamped drawings specifying mix designs, rebar schedules, PT tendon layouts, and concrete compressive strength (commonly 4,000–6,000 psi for commercial slabs; 6,000–8,000 psi for high-rise columns).
  2. Permitting — The general contractor or concrete specialty contractor submits structural drawings to the applicable county or municipal building department. Miami-Dade requires submission through the Miami-Dade County Building Department; Broward through the Broward County Building Division. For additional permitting context, see commercial building permits in South Florida.
  3. Special inspections — Florida Building Code (FBC, 7th Edition) mandates threshold building inspections for structures exceeding a defined height or load threshold. A licensed Special Inspector must be on-site during concrete pours and post-tension stressing.
  4. Concrete placement — Ready-mix deliveries are coordinated against pour schedules; cylinders are cast on-site and tested at 7-day and 28-day intervals by an accredited testing laboratory.
  5. Post-tension stressing — PT tendons are stressed to engineered force values (typically 33,000 lbs per tendon in standard PT slab applications) after the slab reaches minimum compressive strength.
  6. Inspections and certificate of occupancy — Final structural inspection must pass before CO issuance.

South Florida's High-Velocity Hurricane Zone (HVHZ) designation — which covers all of Miami-Dade and Broward counties — imposes wind load requirements beyond the FBC base standard. For the full framework, see hurricane-resistant construction standards in South Florida.


Common scenarios

Commercial concrete and structural contractors operate across a wide range of project types in this metro:


Decision boundaries

Selecting between a certified general contractor and a concrete specialty contractor as prime depends on project scope and owner risk tolerance.

Factor General Contractor (CGC) Concrete Specialty Contractor
Structural concrete authority Full Full (within specialty scope)
Can self-perform all trades Yes No — requires additional specialty subs
Typical use case Multi-trade commercial projects Concrete-only scopes (foundations, slabs)
Licensing body DBPR / Chapter 489 DBPR / Chapter 489
Structural engineer required Yes (stamp required) Yes (stamp required)

Owners evaluating cost estimating for structural work should reference commercial contractor cost estimating in South Florida, as concrete costs in this market are influenced by aggregate import logistics (Florida has no natural stone quarries in the southern peninsula), PT tendon material pricing, and labor availability.

For projects involving federal funding or Davis-Bacon wage obligations, structural concrete contractors must comply with prevailing wage schedules — detailed at prevailing wage and Davis-Bacon for South Florida commercial projects.

Contractors operating in flood-prone zones — a near-universal condition in coastal South Florida — must account for FEMA National Flood Insurance Program elevation and construction requirements. See South Florida flood zone construction requirements — commercial.

Firms entering this sector or verifying contractor standing should consult the South Florida commercial contractor licensing requirements reference and the broader contractor landscape covered at the South Florida Commercial Contractor Authority.


References

📜 1 regulatory citation referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

📜 1 regulatory citation referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log